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Speech recognition is an imperfect technology anyway, especially if you're speaking in an Indian accent for a recogniser trained for general English (yes I know en-IN is an option but still, Indian accents can get pretty thick, plus I doubt there's a lot of source material). Don't expect a free one to perform very well, companies invest a fair amount into commercial grade speech recognition and even those fuck up quite often.
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@RememberMe my favourite was when we failed to understand an Indian fellow from a contractor team because of the accent. Turned out the other guys in his team didn't understand him either. LOL
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@Fast-Nop lol, it has happened to me too. It doesn't help that ours is a fairly large country so there isn't one Indian accent, and on top of that let's just say that people's command over English can vary quite a bit. Working in a group often devolves into a guessing game.
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I used speech recognition package of python in one of my projects. It is working properly but it is not recognising some words, like if I say my name so it will print something else, printing 2 as doose, 1 as drone. To sum up, it's not considering few words.
I tried some amendments like set the language to english-india.
language =en-IN
But after this also, same problem arose.
question
python 3
speech recognition