Google Research Blog
The latest news from Research at Google
Deploying Goog411
Friday, March 28, 2008
Posted by Francoise Beaufays
A couple of years ago, a few of us got together and decided to build Goog411. It would be a free phone service that users could call to connect to any business in the US, or simply to browse through a list of businesses such as "bookstores" in a given city. Everything would be fully automated, with no operator in the background, just a speech recognition system to converse with the user, and Google Maps to execute the business search.
We knew that speech recognition is not a solved problem; there would be users for whom the system wouldn't work well, and queries that would be harder to recognize than others. But we got big assets through hosting the service: we could iterate as often as we wanted on any component of the system, we'd have access to all the data, and we could measure whatever seemed relevant to callers. So we built Goog411, started taking some traffic, defining metrics, and iterated many, many times.
We learned a few interesting things in the process (see
our ICASSP paper
). For example, we discovered that databases with lists of business names are almost useless to train a language model for how users answer the question "What business name or category?"; aggregated web query logs from Google Maps yield far better performance. And we found the speech data we collect through our own service is almost as useful to model new queries as the web data, even though we have orders of magnitude less of it. After all, you may type "real estate" in Google Maps to glance at a few properties, but would you ask for it over the phone while driving your car?
Today Goog411 has grown from an experiment into a product, and we're working on expanding the service to Canada. As calls flow through the system, our focus is still on making the best use of the increasing data, defining metrics that best correlate to the user's experience, and taking advantage of the computer resources and data sources available within Google.
Maybe our most rewarding experience so far has been to see our traffic grow, and to see repeat callers succeed more and more often with the system. Have you tried it already? Just call 1-800-GOOG-411, and don't hesitate to send us
feedback
!
Labels
accessibility
ACL
ACM
Acoustic Modeling
Adaptive Data Analysis
ads
adsense
adwords
Africa
Android
API
App Engine
App Inventor
April Fools
Audio
Australia
Automatic Speech Recognition
Awards
Cantonese
China
Chrome
Cloud Computing
Collaboration
Computational Photography
Computer Science
Computer Vision
conference
conferences
Conservation
correlate
Course Builder
crowd-sourcing
CVPR
Data Center
data science
datasets
Deep Learning
distributed systems
Diversity
Earth Engine
economics
Education
Electronic Commerce and Algorithms
EMEA
EMNLP
Encryption
entities
Entity Salience
Environment
Exacycle
Faculty Institute
Faculty Summit
Flu Trends
Fusion Tables
gamification
Genomics
Gmail
Google Books
Google Drive
Google Science Fair
Google Sheets
Google Translate
Google Voice Search
Google+
Government
grants
HCI
Health
High Dynamic Range Imaging
ICML
ICSE
Image Annotation
Image Classification
Image Processing
Inbox
Information Retrieval
internationalization
Internet of Things
Interspeech
IPython
Journalism
jsm
jsm2011
K-12
KDD
Klingon
Korean
Labs
Linear Optimization
localization
Machine Hearing
Machine Intelligence
Machine Learning
Machine Translation
MapReduce
market algorithms
Market Research
ML
MOOC
NAACL
Natural Language Processing
Natural Language Understanding
Network Management
Networks
Neural Networks
Ngram
NIPS
NLP
open source
operating systems
Optical Character Recognition
optimization
osdi
osdi10
patents
ph.d. fellowship
PiLab
Policy
Professional Development
Public Data Explorer
publication
Publications
Quantum Computing
renewable energy
Research
Research Awards
resource optimization
Search
search ads
Security and Privacy
SIGCOMM
SIGMOD
Site Reliability Engineering
Software
Speech
Speech Recognition
statistics
Structured Data
Systems
TensorFlow
Translate
trends
TTS
TV
UI
University Relations
UNIX
User Experience
video
Vision Research
Visiting Faculty
Visualization
VLDB
Voice Search
Wiki
wikipedia
WWW
YouTube
Archive
2015
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2014
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2013
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2012
Dec
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2011
Dec
Nov
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2010
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2009
Dec
Nov
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2008
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Jul
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
2007
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
Feb
2006
Dec
Nov
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
Apr
Mar
Feb
Feed
Follow @googleresearch
Give us feedback in our
Product Forums
.