Apple’s iPhone Assistant Has Issues with Southern Accents

ap_siri_womans_voice_nt_111024_wgFrom HAL and Skynet to the Borg and GLaDOS, science fiction long has predicted that mankind and machines will develop a tempestuous relationship in the future. According to some users of Apple’s digital personal assistant Siri, however, the misunderstandings have started already.Siri — or Speech Interpretation and Recognition Interface — is capable of completing many tasks issued by voice commands, from setting reminders and sending Twitter updates to searching for local movie listings.But when it comes to Southern accents, some users say she’s about as useless as a football bat and as dumb as a sack of hammers.Bless her heart.“She doesn’t understand me, even when I speak very clearly,” writes Michelle Watkins Snow in response to a post on the Times Free Press’ Facebook page. “She has tried to say some very vulgar things that I supposedly said. I wish they [had] a Southern Siri.”If Siri were a human assistant, writes Nancy Garrott Mele, she probably would give her the boot.“Siri doesn’t comprehend Southern,” Mele says. “I pretty much jump for joy when she dials the right number. How you get ‘Jack’ from a pronunciation of ‘Vance’ I shall never know.”According to Apple, there is no quick fix to Siri’s linguistic foibles, just time and continued use. On the company’s “Siri Frequently Asked Questions” site, Apple reports that the adaptive program incorporates voice recognition algorithms that, over time, help it learn to distinguish between a Southern drawl and a Western twang.“The more you use Siri, the better it will understand you,” the site reads. “As more people use Siri and it’s exposed to more variations of a language, its overall recognition of dialects and accents will continue to improve, and Siri will work even better.”Since its debut as an integrated feature in Apple’s hardware with the October 2011 release of the iPhone 4S, Siri has been hitting the books, and her accuracy has improved, experts say.In June 2012, Piper Jaffray Investment Research senior analyst Gene Munster tested Siri’s comprehension and accuracy. He and his team asked Siri 1,600 questions — 800 in a quiet room and 800 via headphone microphones on the busy streets of Minneapolis, where the firm is headquartered. Indoors, Siri understood about 89 percent of questions and accurately responded 68 percent of the time, earning an overall ‘D’ grade from Munster’s team.Following improvements via the iOS 6 operating system update on Sept. 19, 2012, however, Munster repeated the indoor test. The results were better — 91 percent comprehension and 77 percent accuracy, about a ‘C’ average.Those improvements indicate Siri’s adaptive learning algorithms are doing their job, said Tim Barajin, a nationally renowned columnist and president of California technology consulting firm Creative Strategies, Inc.“That speaks to the rich, underlying architecture that is Siri,” Bajarin says during a phone interview while attending the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. “When it starts out, [Siri] already has a very rich dictionary of sounds and tones that it can draw from, but it gets smarter over time.”Barajin says he would grade Siri even higher, closer to a B-minus, and with millions of iPhone users constantly testing and improving the software, that score can only get better.Siri has settings for four national variations of English — American, British, Australian and Canadian — but Barajin says Apple is unlikely to subdivide the American option to reflect regional dialects.“In the U.S., we don’t have dramatic differences that might exist in China or India,” he explains. “Rather, Siri is designed to learn how you speak the word.”So while Snow may not get the Southern Siri she wants, Barajin says that, if she is patient with the service, she’ll be in high cotton soon enough.

The Chattanooga Times/Free Press (Chattanooga, Tenn.)

(c)2013 the Chattanooga Times/Free Press (Chattanooga, Tenn.)

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