Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Assisting Maritime Search and Rescue (SAR) Personnel with AI-Based Speech Recognition and Smart Direction Finding

Aylin Gözalan    
Ole John    
Thomas Lübcke    
Andreas Maier    
Maximilian Reimann    
Jan-Gerrit Richter and Ivan Zverev    

Resumen

Communication for processing relevant information plays a paramount role in developing a comprehensive understanding of Search and Rescue (SAR) situations and conducting operations in a successful and reliable manner. Nevertheless, communication systems have not changed considerably in the context of simplifying very high frequency (VHF) maritime communication and enhancing the value of SAR practices. The Automated Transcription of Maritime VHF Radio Communication for SAR Mission Coordination (ARTUS) project approaches this problem with the development of an assistance system which employs AI-based speech recognition and smart direction finding. First, ideas and specified needs of end users for designing the user interface are presented in this paper. Further, preliminary accomplishments of domain specific language training for maritime speech recognition, and the direction-finding algorithms for localizing senders are sketched out. While the preliminary results build a solid ground, additional field experiments will be conducted in order to enhance the accuracy and reliability of speech recognition and direction finding. The identified end user requirements across different personnel groups show commonalities, but call for a differentiated approach in order to meet the challenges and peculiar needs of the various working contexts.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Xintao Liang, Yuhang Li, Xiaomin Li, Yue Zhang and Youdong Ding    
Implementing single-channel speech enhancement under unknown noise conditions is a challenging problem. Most existing time-frequency domain methods are based on the amplitude spectrogram, and these methods often ignore the phase mismatch between noisy sp... ver más
Revista: Information

 
Jing Yang, Hongyu Yang, Zhengyuan Wu and Xiping Wu    
Due to increased air traffic flow, air traffic controllers (ATCs) operate in a state of high load or even overload for long periods of time, which can seriously affect the reliability and efficiency of controllers? commands. Thus, the early identificatio... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Oliver Ohneiser, Hartmut Helmke, Shruthi Shetty, Matthias Kleinert, Heiko Ehr, Sebastian Schier-Morgenthal, Saeed Sarfjoo, Petr Motlicek, ?arunas Murauskas, Tomas Pagirys, Haris Usanovic, Mirta Me?trovic and Aneta Cerná    
Assistant Based Speech Recognition (ABSR) systems for air traffic control radiotelephony communication have shown their potential to reduce air traffic controllers? (ATCos) workload. Related research activities mainly focused on utterances for approach a... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Juan Zuluaga-Gomez, Iuliia Nigmatulina, Amrutha Prasad, Petr Motlicek, Driss Khalil, Srikanth Madikeri, Allan Tart, Igor Szoke, Vincent Lenders, Mickael Rigault and Khalid Choukri    
Voice communication between air traffic controllers (ATCos) and pilots is critical for ensuring safe and efficient air traffic control (ATC). The handling of these voice communications requires high levels of awareness from ATCos and can be tedious and e... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Driss Khalil, Amrutha Prasad, Petr Motlicek, Juan Zuluaga-Gomez, Iuliia Nigmatulina, Srikanth Madikeri and Christof Schuepbach    
In air traffic management (ATM), voice communications are critical for ensuring the safe and efficient operation of aircraft. The pertinent voice communications?air traffic controller (ATCo) and pilot?are usually transmitted in a single channel, which po... ver más
Revista: Aerospace