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J.R. Davis. 1991. Let your fingers do the spelling: Implicit disambiguation of words spelled with the telephone keypad. Avios Journal, 9:57--66.

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Keyboards without Keyboards: A Survey of Virtual Keyboards - Kölsch, Turk (2002)   (Correct)

....of mobile phone keypads. These keyboard types severely limit the achievable throughput, although a study [20] has shown that both motor and cognitive skills adapt to the common use with only the two thumbs. Shannon s statistical methods and prediction [25] frequently called word disambiguation [4] and used for example in the T9 algorithm [28] can be employed to achieve bandwidths of up to 46 wpm [27] A more recent theoretical approach [14] suggests that raw typing bandwidths up to 60 wpm are possible. Another way to increase the amount of information each key can produce is to use ....

Davis, J. R. Let Your Fingers do the Spelling: Implicit disambiguation of words spelled with the telephone keypad. Avios Journal, 9, 57-66, March 1991.


Reliable Spelling Despite Poor Spoken Letter Recognition - Marx, Schmandt   (Correct)

....could be specified with confidence. These results are comparable to those obtained for disambiguation of names entered via a TouchTone keypad. Davis found a 5. 9 percent collision for the same 6000 name database when using Touchtones as compared to 13.2 percent as we found for speech recognition [DAVIS]. The results for the dictionary test were similar: Davis used a dictionary of 48,000 words but with the same average letters per word; he found that 11 of the words collided again, half the rate of this algorithm. It is no surprise that the TouchTone error rate is smaller, for each letter is ....

Davis, Jim. "Let Your Fingers do the Spelling: Implicit Disambiguation of Words Spelled With the Telephone Keypad." Journal of the American Voice I/O Society, 9:57-66, March 1991.


Putting People First: Specifying Proper Names in Speech.. - Marx, Schmandt (1994)   (6 citations)  (Correct)

....f Davis Dennison Deveraux Edwards Ellison Franklin 3 d, e, f Dennison Deveraux Edwards 8 w, x, y Deveraux Edwards 2 a, b, c Edwards Figure 1: implicit disambiguation of successive keys narrow the list of possible names to one. the names in that database. A study of disambiguation [3] showed the chances of different names mapping to the same touch tone keys to be no worse than the likelihood of finding multiple individuals with identical last names; in either case, user effort is required to identify the desired name from the two or three duplicates matches. From our ....

Davis, J. "Let Your Fingers Do the Spelling: Implicit disambiguation of words spelled with the telephone keypad" in proceedings of the American Voice Input/Output Society, 1990.


Error Detection and Recovery in Spoken Dialogue Systems - Filisko, Seneff (2004)   (Correct)

No context found.

J.R. Davis. 1991. Let your fingers do the spelling: Implicit disambiguation of words spelled with the telephone keypad. Avios Journal, 9:57--66.


Toward Effective Conversational Messaging - Marx (1995)   (5 citations)  (Correct)

No context found.

J. Davis. "Let Your Fingers Do the Spelling: Implicit Disambiguation of Words Spelled With the Telephone Keypad" Proceedings of the American Voice Input/Output Society, 1990.

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