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Rhino Speech-to-Intent engine demos.

Project description

Rhino Speech-to-Intent Engine Demos

Made in Vancouver, Canada by Picovoice

This package contains demos and commandline utilities for processing real-time audio (i.e. microphone) and audio files using Rhino Speech-to-Intent engine.

Rhino

Rhino is Picovoice's Speech-to-Intent engine. It directly infers intent from spoken commands within a given context of interest, in real-time. For example, given a spoken command

Can I have a small double-shot espresso?

Rhino infers that the user and emits the following inference result:

{
  "isUnderstood": "true",
  "intent": "orderBeverage",
  "slots": {
    "beverage": "espresso",
    "size": "small",
    "numberOfShots": "2"
  }
}

Rhino is:

  • using deep neural networks trained in real-world environments.
  • compact and computationally-efficient. It is perfect for IoT.
  • self-service. Developers can train custom models using Picovoice Console.

Compatibility

  • Python 3
  • Runs on Linux (x86_64), Mac (x86_64), Windows (x86_64), Raspberry Pi (all variants), and BeagleBone.

Installation

Microphone demo uses PyAudio for recording input audio. Consult the installation guide at PyAudio.

sudo pip3 install pvrhinodemo

Usage

File Demo

It allows testing Rhino on a corpus of audio files. The demo is mainly useful for quantitative performance benchmarking. It accepts 16kHz audio files. Rhino processes a single-channel audio stream if a stereo file is provided it only processes the first (left) channel. Note that only the relevant spoken command should be present in the file and no other speech. Also there needs to be at least one second of silence at the end of the file.

rhino_demo_file --input_audio_path ${AUDIO_PATH} --context_path ${CONTEXT_PATH} 

Microphone Demo

It opens an audio stream from a microphone and performs inference in spoken commands:

rhino_demo_mic --context_path ${CONTEXT_PATH}

It is possible that the default audio input device recognized by PyAudio is not the one being used. There are a couple of debugging facilities baked into the demo application to solve this. First, type the following into the console:

rhino_demo_mic --show_audio_devices

It provides information about various audio input devices on the box. On a Linux box, this is the console output

'index': '0', 'name': 'HDA Intel PCH: ALC892 Analog (hw:0,0)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '2'
'index': '1', 'name': 'HDA Intel PCH: ALC892 Alt Analog (hw:0,2)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '2'
'index': '2', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 0 (hw:1,3)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '3', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 1 (hw:1,7)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '4', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 2 (hw:1,8)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '5', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 3 (hw:1,9)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '6', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 0 (hw:2,3)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '7', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 1 (hw:2,7)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '8', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 2 (hw:2,8)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '9', 'name': 'HDA NVidia: HDMI 3 (hw:2,9)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '10', 'name': 'Logitech USB Headset: Audio (hw:3,0)', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '1'
'index': '11', 'name': 'sysdefault', 'defaultSampleRate': '48000.0', 'maxInputChannels': '128'
'index': '12', 'name': 'front', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '13', 'name': 'surround21', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '14', 'name': 'surround40', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '15', 'name': 'surround41', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '16', 'name': 'surround50', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '17', 'name': 'surround51', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '18', 'name': 'surround71', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '19', 'name': 'pulse', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '32'
'index': '20', 'name': 'dmix', 'defaultSampleRate': '48000.0', 'maxInputChannels': '0'
'index': '21', 'name': 'default', 'defaultSampleRate': '44100.0', 'maxInputChannels': '32'

It can be seen that the last device (index 21) is considered default. But on this machine, a headset is being used as the input device which has an index of 10. After finding the correct index the demo application can be invoked as below

rhino_demo_mic --context_path ${CONTEXT_PATH} --audio_device_index 10

If the problem persists we suggest storing the recorded audio into a file for inspection. This can be achieved by

rhino_demo_mic --context_path ${CONTEXT_PATH} --audio_device_index 10 --output_path ~/test.wav

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