“If I close my eyes and there are 10 people talking in a room, I have no idea who’s saying what and where they are in the room exactly. In a conference room meeting, for instance, such a system might be deployed instead of a central microphone, allowing better control of in-room audio. This allows the system to be moved between environments and set up automatically. Like a fleet of Roombas, each about an inch in diameter, the microphones automatically deploy from, and then return to, a charging station. With the help of the team’s deep-learning algorithms, the system lets users mute certain areas or separate simultaneous conversations, even if two adjacent people have similar voices. The ability to locate and control sound - isolating one person talking from a specific location in a crowded room, for instance - has challenged researchers, especially without visual cues from cameras.Ī team led by researchers at the University of Washington has developed a shape-changing smart speaker, which uses self-deploying microphones to divide rooms into speech zones and track the positions of individual speakers. In a bustling cafe, there are no buttons to silence the table beside you. But for the most part, this ability doesn’t translate easily to recording in-person gatherings. In virtual meetings, it’s easy to keep people from talking over each other. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering - demonstrate the system in a meeting room. Here UW doctoral students Tuochao Chen (foreground), Mengyi Shan, Malek Itani, and Bandhav Veluri - all in the Paul G. Commercial reproduction, distribution or transmission of any part or parts of this website or any information contained therein by any means whatsoever without the prior written permission of the Club is not permitted.A team led by researchers at the University of Washington has developed a shape-changing smart speaker, which uses self-deploying microphones to divide rooms into speech zones and track the positions of individual speakers. This website is the only official website of the New England Patriots and is © Copyright New England Patriots (the "Club"). So, that's kind of the way we approach it. But, I think the analysis and the corrections and all that, you really want to – just because the score was in your favor doesn't mean that there aren't things in the game that aren't going to come back and hurt you the next time if you don't get them fixed. It's definitely not the same and it shouldn't be the same. We try to keep that on a pretty even keel from week-to-week, but of course it's a lot better feeling Monday when you win the game than when you don't. Whether that's the offensive line, the punt coverage team, whatever it happens to be, like how all that fits together and how that unit can perform better. They are relevant to improving and becoming individually a better player and collectively as a team and as a unit. So, I would say the level of analysis and the corrections are really not relevant to the score. But, at the same time there are plays we need to correct in wins and there are plays that we can build on in games that we don't win. I think when you put in a hard week of work and you get the results that you were looking for, there's a lot of positive feelings there. But, this game itself, whatever the results are, they are, and we'll turn the page by the end of the day, Monday afternoon, and move on.īB: Yeah, of course. But, that's kind of a different component of that, the self-scouting. There will be a later point in time in the week where we'll kind of put it together with multiple games and look at it, self-scout and see how the most recent game adds in with the last two, three, four that we've played, games we've played against common components, things like that. By the end of this afternoon, we'll be all in on Dallas, and the previous game will be on the books, and we'll have done all the corrections, analysis and so forth. For the people that are working– for the guys on our staff that are working – on those teams over the weekend to try to get ahead. We've already done some preliminary work on our future opponent, but not in the kind of detail that we'll dive into, but enough just to kind of get organized and know what we're dealing with. BB: Well, we're done with the game that we played by late Monday afternoon, I'd say, if it's a Sunday game, late Monday afternoon.
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