Extending Nexmo – Streaming Transcription Comparison
Kelly Andrews
Posted on September 17, 2019
In the world of communication, words are vital, and getting the right ones is incredibly important. Transcriptions of voice calls can help businesses understand emerging trends in content from sales and support phone calls.
Transcription is the process of taking audio conversations and turning them into written words. In the past, this was handled by humans listening to a recording and typing out the words manually. This practice still exists today. There are now automated services that have emerged, allowing software developers to send audio files to services for a more immediate result.
This work alone can provide incredible insights, but I’m focused specifically on streaming transcriptions where real-time information can provide another level of detail to your sales and support team.
Overview
This post is a comparison and overview of the four leading cloud provider’s streaming transcription services: Amazon Transcribe, Azure Cognitive Speech Service, Google Cloud Speech-to-Text, and IBM Watson Speech-to-Text.
Using the Nexmo Voice API and WebSockets, I connected a voice call from my cell phone and streamed the audio to test the service. During the process, I took a few notes regarding things like features, ease of use, accuracy, and costs.
Accuracy
One of the more critical factors when selecting a transcription service is its accuracy. Having incorrect information would cause any data to be untrusted.
I tested each service using an 8kHz
sample rate using my cell phone. You can also use 16kHz
, but in some cases, it’s actually less accurate. Using various phrases, I spoke at a relatively average rate of speech at a moderate volume. The room was also quiet enough to remove background noises.
Every service transcribed the phrases I used with no issues, but some of it depended on how well I spoke. Unfortunately, any service struggles with lack of enunciation.
Otherwise, you can feel reasonably confident with any one of these services to handle your transcriptions.
“Stand clear of the doors.”
- IBM Watson Speech-to-Text – 90% (It couldn’t get “stand” no matter how clear I spoke)
- Azure Cognitive Speech Service – 100%
- Google Cloud Speech-to-Text – 100%
- Amazon Transcribe – 100%
“Shake well before serving”
- IBM Watson Speech-to-Text – 100%
- Azure Cognitive Speech Service – 100%
- Google Cloud Speech-to-Text – 100%
- Amazon Transcribe – 100%
“Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.”
- IBM Watson Speech-to-Text – 100%
- Azure Cognitive Speech Service – 100%
- Google Cloud Speech-to-Text – 100%
- Amazon Transcribe – 100%
Features
The feature sets for most of the services are very similar:
- Uses Machine Learning for Accuracy
- Custom models for optimization
- Audio files and streaming
- Contextual formatting for proper nouns
- Punctuation support
Language Support
Google Cloud Speech-to-Text has far-and-away the highest number of supported languages at 120 and can auto-detect the language in most cases. The next closest language support is Azure Cognitive Speech Service with 30 and IBM Watson Speech-to-Text with 15. Amazon Transcribe is most restrictive with only 5 languages available for streaming transcription (more available for audio files).
Ease of Use
Each provider has their unique path to success. All of them provide getting started guides in various formats. However, they tend to either be for sending an audio file or capturing microphone input. While microphone input is the streaming method we need to use with the Nexmo WebSocket, it comes with some additional front end code that was unnecessary.
Google Cloud Speech-to-Text
The Google SDK was simple to implement by creating a SpeechClient
with the provided SDK and the Google credentials file provided during the service account user.
The SpeechClient
provides a method called streamingRecognize
which provides events.
const client = new speech.SpeechClient(); let request ={ config: { encoding: 'LINEAR16', sampleRateHertz: 8000, languageCode: 'en-US' }, interimResults: false }; const recognizeStream = client .streamingRecognize(request) .on('error', console.error) .on('data', data => { console.dir(data, {depth: null}); });
Google’s simplicity gets an advantage over other competitors. You can get up and running with little effort, and for me, that’s a huge win.
Google Cloud Speech-to-Text Documentation
Azure/IBM
Both IBM and Azure provide language-specific SDKs and plenty of getting started documentation to get you going, but the API direct call is straightforward to implement. These services can both be used with just connecting to an API route with the wss://
protocol and providing a key.
Azure Cognitive Speech Service
wss://region.stt.speech.microsoft.com/speech/recognition/interactive/cognitiveservices/v1?format=simple&language=LANG\_CODE
IBM Watson Speech-to-Text
wss://stream.watsonplatform.net/speech-to-text/api/v1/recognize?model=langage\_model
There are some additional headers to be provided, but you can find the documentation for each service to be a beneficial resource.
Amazon Transcribe
I have to admit, AWS was the hardest for me to implement. The documentation had very few examples, and the SDK didn’t seem to support streaming services at all. When I first set out to build the Amazon Transcribe integration, HTTP/2 was the only protocol available and required signing every request sent to the server. Being a bit of a novice with AWS in general, this proved to be quite tricky for me.
Where this story makes a great turn around, is when Developer Relations lead, Brandon West stepped in, and wrote some sample code using a WebSocket connection and saved me. The sample code made things much more accessible, but the general authorization process and call signing make Amazon Transcribe a bit harder to implement in general.
Here I used the WebSocket
Node package and created a signed URL to create the connection.
let url = v4.createPresignedURL( 'GET', `transcribestreaming.${process.env.AWS_REGION}.amazonaws.com:8443`, '/stream-transcription-websocket', 'transcribe', crypto.createHash('sha256').update('', 'utf8').digest('hex'), { 'key': process.env.AWS\_ACCESS\_KEY\_ID, 'secret': process.env.AWS\_SECRET\_ACCESS\_KEY, 'protocol': 'wss', 'expires': 15, 'region': process.env.AWS\_REGION, 'query': `language-code=${process.env.LANG_CODE}&media-encoding=pcm&sample-rate=${process.env.SAMPLE_RATE}` } ); let socket = new WebSocket(url);
Amazon Transcribe is an excellent service, but if it’s not something you are accustomed to, the learning curve can be a challenge.
Amazon Transcribe Documentation
Cost
All of the service providers offer a lite or free tier to get you started. The base cost is on the amount of audio time transcribed. The providers use different increments of time, so I normalized them in the table below to help you understand precisely the difference in costs.
Provider | Free Tier | Cost | Normalized Cost |
---|---|---|---|
Amazon Transcribe | 60 min/month for 12 months | $0.006/~10 seconds | $0.036/minute |
Azure Cognitive Speech Service | 5 audio hours free per month | $1/audio hour | $0.016/minute |
Google Cloud Speech-to-Text | 60 minutes free | $0.006/15 seconds | $0.024/minute |
IBM Watson Speech-to-Text | 500 Minutes per Month | $0.02/minute | $0.02/minute |
Recap
Streaming transcription is a great way to provide insight in real-time. Each of the four leading cloud providers has great offerings with reliable, accurate speech-to-text services. Using Nexmo as the audio stream is a great extension that allows for more in-depth communication experiences for your customers.
I highly recommend Google Speech-to-text as a solid pick. The price is competitive, and the service is robust and reliable. It’s easy to get set up and start using it immediately, which is a bonus.
If you would like to try out any or all of these services, the Nexmo Extend team has created example code to help you get started.
- Amazon Transcribe
- Azure Cognitive Speech Service
- Google Cloud Speech-to-Text
- IBM Watson Speech-to-Text
The post Extending Nexmo – Streaming Transcription Comparison appeared first on Nexmo Developer Blog.
Posted on September 17, 2019
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