Paul Saffo
This is a deeply insightful and immensely useful tour of what is sure to become the most important human-machine interface. As someone who thought he knew all about speech interaction, I was nonetheless surprised again and again as I read through it. Remember 2001? Well, if Hal's fictional designers had read Wired for Speech, Hal not only would have brought his ship's crew back alive, he would have delivered a flawless Academy Award speech as well!
Sherry Turkle
Should a computer refer to itself as 'I'? Questions such as these are philosophical, with implications that range from the social to the psychodynamic. In this dense and fascinating work, they are treated empirically: in a series of systematic investigations, the voice of the machine emerges as a new evocative object for thinking about how people actively draw the line between human and artificial. A compelling contribution to our understanding of computer-human relationshipsnow and in the years to come.
Robert MacNeil
I found Wired for Speech absolutely fascinating, full of amazing insights. It tells us that the more we are forced to learn how to interact with computers, the more we learn about the most human part of ourselves: that we are not only the masters but the slaves of speech.
Endorsement
Should a computer refer to itself as 'I'? Questions such as these are philosophical, with implications that range from the social to the psychodynamic. In this dense and fascinating work, they are treated empirically: in a series of systematic investigations, the voice of the machine emerges as a new evocative object for thinking about how people actively draw the line between human and artificial. A compelling contribution to our understanding of computer-human relationshipsnow and in the years to come.
Sherry Turkle, author of
The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit and
Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet
From the Publisher
With Wired for Speech, Clifford Nass and Scott Brave have done a brilliant job of tracing the implications of the intensely social nature of speech for the burgeoning arena of voice interface systems. Anyone interested in these systems would do well to read this book.
Robert B. Cialdini, Arizona State University, author of
Influence: Science and PracticeI found Wired for Speech absolutely fascinating, full of amazing insights. It tells us that the more we are forced to learn how to interact with computers, the more we learn about the most human part of ourselves: that we are not only the masters but the slaves of speech.
Robert MacNeil, coauthor of
Do You Speak American?This is a deeply insightful and immensely useful tour of what is sure to become the most important human-machine interface. As someone who thought he knew all about speech interaction, I was nonetheless surprised again and again as I read through it. Remember 2001? Well, if Hal's fictional designers had read Wired for Speech, Hal not only would have brought his ship's crew back alive, he would have delivered a flawless Academy Award speech as well!
Paul Saffo, Director, Institute for the Future
Should a computer refer to itself as 'I'? Questions such as these are philosophical, with implications that range from the social to the psychodynamic. In this dense and fascinating work, they are treated empirically: in a series of systematic investigations, the voice of the machine emerges as a new evocative object for thinking about how people actively draw the line between human and artificial. A compelling contribution to our understanding of computer-human relationshipsnow and in the years to come.
Sherry Turkle, author of
The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit and
Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet
Robert B. Cialdini
With Wired for Speech, Clifford Nass and Scott Brave have done a brilliant job of tracing the implications of the intensely social nature of speech for the burgeoning arena of voice interface systems. Anyone interested in these systems would do well to read this book.