 |
|
|
MOFFET FIELD, Calif., June 24, 2005 -- Kim Farrell, project manager for "Clarissa," tests the safety of drinking water
using the new "Clarissa" voice-activated system in a simulation of the International Space Station
at NASA Ames Research Center. Innovative technology from Xerox Corporation has been incorporated
in the system, which will allow astronauts aboard the International Space Station to easily and
efficiently perform tests and maintenance. (Photo: NASA Ames Research Center)
|
NASA, Xerox To Demonstrate 'Virtual Crew Assistant'
|
Intelligent conversation with robots - long the bread and butter of science fiction authors - soon may take another step closer to reality for astronauts on the International Space Station.
Scientists from NASA Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley and Xerox Corporation will demonstrate a sophisticated, voice-operated computer system on June 26 at the Association for Computational Linguists' 25th annual meeting at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Called Clarissa, the system was developed in an effort to ease astronaut workload.
"Clarissa is a fully voice-operated 'virtual crew assistant,' enabling astronauts to be more efficient with their hands and eyes and to give full attention to the task while they navigate through the procedure using spoken commands," said Beth Ann Hockey, project lead on the team that developed Clarissa at NASA Ames.
Plans call for astronaut John Phillips to complete the Clarissa training procedure onboard NASA's International Space Station as early as June 27 in preparation for later use of Clarissa.
"This will be the first use of the system in space," Hockey said.
Clarissa is "hands-free" and responds to astronauts' voice commands, reading procedure steps out loud as they work, helping keep track of which steps have been completed, and supporting flexible voice-activated alarms and timers.
Astronauts now perform about 12,000 complex procedures to maintain life-support systems, inspect space suits, conduct science experiments, perform medical exams and other routine tasks.
"Just try to analyze a water sample while scrolling through pages of a procedure manual displayed on a computer monitor while you and the computer float in microgravity," challenges astronaut Michael Fincke, who recently completed a six-month stay on the ISS. "To be able to speak to the system and hear the step-by-step instructions while my hands are free to complete the procedure will be like having another crew member aboard."
Because the system is required to always be ready to accept a voice command, the original version tried to process all spoken words, including conversations between crew members. As a result, Clarissa had difficulty discerning between conversations and commands given to the system.
In 2004, Clarissa lead implementer Manny Rayner of NASA Ames contacted Xerox researcher Jean-Michel Renders of Xerox Research Centre Europe in Grenoble, France, about a possible collaboration. They hoped that Xerox's experience in machine learning, linguistics and text categorization would increase the system's accuracy on the "open microphone" task.
"NASA wanted the system to be ready to assist at any time and without requiring artificial activation commands," said Renders. "Therefore, a simpler 'Star Trek' solution - like having crew members address the computer by stating a specific word such as 'computer' before posing a question or speaking a command to the system - wasn't a viable solution. We needed to improve the performance of the system in discriminating between commands and conversation."
The technology developed by Renders to address the NASA speech-recognition problem is also being used at Xerox to improve categorization results for printed or digital documents. Xerox researchers at Grenoble have developed a number of leading-edge software capabilities that make it easier for Xerox customers to manage document content.
The Xerox methodology allows Clarissa to more accurately analyze each utterance. It can recognize words, sentences and word context and can act on a variety of commands phrased in different ways. The system now looks at all the individual words within the sentence, takes into account the system's confidence that it has correctly recognized each individual word, and uses a sophisticated machine-learning algorithm to weigh the various pieces of positive and negative information.
This significantly increases the system's ability to determine the difference between commands directed to the system and side conversations. According to Renders, the improvements have cut the error rate of the system by more than half.
Clarissa currently supports about 75 individual commands, which can be accessed using a vocabulary of some 260 words. The team plans to increase the commands and add to the vocabulary in the future.
"Some commands are rather simple, but others are quite complex," Hockey said. "A lot of the time, you're just saying 'next' or 'go to step eight'. But you also might need to say something like 'cancel the alarm at 10:25' or 'set challenge verify mode on steps three through fourteen.' "
"Working with Xerox on Clarissa shows the many benefits of forming collaborative partnerships between research organizations," Hockey added.
|
|
|

|
|
 |
| 2008
|
 |
| Xerox Honors Local Inventors at Annual Patent Dinner
|
 |
| Public Gets Sneak Peek at Xeroxs Erasable Paper at WIRED NextFest
|
 |
| Xerox Makes Environmental Remediation Patents Available to All Through Eco-Patent Commons
|
 |
| Scientists Develop 3-D Document Visualization for "No Surprises" Printing
|
 |
| DARPA program builds on PARC foundation in printing large-area, flexible electronics
|
 |
| Xerox Joins IORG
|
 |
| Xerox Research Centre Europe coordinates EU CACAO project to provide cross-language access to online catalogues and libraries
|
 |
| Incubating Inside Xerox Labs: Innovation that Benifits the Workplace, Healthcare, and the Environment
|
 |
| Robert Loce Elected SPIE Fellow
|
 |
| Rochester Engineering Society Celebrates Technical Excellence
|
 |
| Xerox is Among the World's Best Analyst Competing to Win the Edelman Prize for Achievemnt in Operations Research & Analytics
|
 |
| Patent Powerhouse: Xerox Boasts 101 Inventors with 50 or More Patents
|
 |
| 2007
|
 |
| Xerox Reveals Breakthrough Software that Categorizes Text and Images at the Same Time
|
 |
| Xerox funds new services laboratory at NC State University
|
 |
| The Science Consultant Program: Bringing Science to Life for 40 Years
|
 |
| Xerox Technology Tricks Counterfeiters
|
 |
| Xerox Opens Its Labs to Journalists on TechDay
|
 |
| R&D Magazine Lauds Xerox FreeFlow VI Software Suite
|
 |
| Getting to 100 before 50; Xerox scientist Bob Loce Reaches Patent Milestone
|
 |
| Xerox to Fund Green, Nano, Imaging Fellowships at MIT School of Engineering
|
 |
| Know-How Results in breakthrough paper: saves trees and money
|
 |
| Xerox Funds 11 New University Research Projects
|
 |
| Surpassing Search: New Xerox text mining software goes beyond "keywords" to deliver more relevant information
|
 |
| Xerox receives the National Medal of Technology
|
 |
| Now You See It, Now You Don't: Xerox Scientists Develop Fluorescent Writing To Deter Counterfeiting
|
 |
| Xerox Scientist Creates 'Color Language' Making Color Matching as Easy as Describing a Color
|
 |
| PARC Scientist Stu Card Wins Franklin Institute Bower Award for Achievement in Science
|
 |
| Inside Innovation at Xerox: Scientists Create a Rainbow of Custom Blended Colors for DocuTech Highlight Color Systems
|
 |
| Xerox's Santokh Badesha Reaches Rare Milestone; Inventor Awarded 150th Patent
|
 |
| Content Centric Networking
|
 |
| Groundbreaking Canadian Nanotechnology Partnership Lays Foundation For Big Success From Tiny Tech
|
 |
| Xerox Awarded 27 Percent More Patents In 2006
|
 |
| 2006
|
 |
| 2005
|
 |
| 2004
|
 |
| 2003
|
 |
| 2002
|
 |
| 2001
|
 |
 |
Contact Us: for questions about Xerox research and innovation, patents or technology
licensing, scientific work and related inquiries, please email:
xigwebmaster@xerox.com
Outside Submissions: Xerox encourages and welcomes unsolicited ideas and suggestions. More information on submitting your ideas to Xerox for review can be found here.
If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact us by email at Outsidesubmissions@xerox.com.
For all other inquiries, please use the appropriate contacts listed at Contact Xerox.
|
|