Note
Please see Azure Cognitive Services for Speech documentation for the latest supported speech solutions.
SemanticResultKey Class
Associates a key string with SemanticResultValue values to define the SemanticValue objects.
Inheritance Hierarchy
System.Object
Microsoft.Speech.Recognition.SemanticResultKey
Namespace: Microsoft.Speech.Recognition
Assembly: Microsoft.Speech (in Microsoft.Speech.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Class SemanticResultKey
'Usage
Dim instance As SemanticResultKey
public class SemanticResultKey
Remarks
The basic unit of semantic expression under the Microsoft Speech Platform SDK 11 is the SemanticValue, which is a key-value pair.
The SemanticResultKey object tags SemanticResultValue instances contained in GrammarBuilder objects and strings so that the values can readily be accessed from SemanticValue instances following recognition.
You can use SemanticResultValue and SemanticResultKey objects, in conjunction with GrammarBuilder and Choices objects, to define the semantic structure for a speech recognition grammar. To access the semantic information in a recognition result, obtain a SemanticValue instance through the Semantics property on RecognizedPhrase.
For more information about using SemanticResultValue and SemanticResultKey objects, see Add Semantics to a GrammarBuilder Grammar (Microsoft.Speech) and Use a SemanticResultKey to Extract a SemanticResultValue (Microsoft.Speech).
Examples
The following example creates a Grammar to recognize password input of the form "My password is …", where the actual input is matched with a wildcard.
The wildcard is tagged with a semantic key, and the SpeechRecognized handler checks for the presence of this tag to verify that a password input has occurred.
private void pwdGrammar()
{
GrammarBuilder pwdBuilder = new GrammarBuilder("My Password is");
GrammarBuilder wildcardBuilder = new GrammarBuilder();
wildcardBuilder.AppendWildcard();
SemanticResultKey wildcardKey= new SemanticResultKey("Password", wildcardBuilder);
pwdBuilder+=wildcardKey;
Grammar grammar = new Grammar(pwdBuilder);
grammar.Name = "Password input";
grammar.SpeechRecognized +=
delegate(object sender, SpeechRecognizedEventArgs eventArgs)
{
SemanticValue semantics = eventArgs.Result.Semantics;
RecognitionResult result=eventArgs.Result;
if (!semantics.ContainsKey("Password"))
{
SpeechUI.SendTextFeedback(eventArgs.Result, "No Password Provided", false);
}
else
{
RecognizedAudio pwdAudio =
result.GetAudioForWordRange(result.Words[3],
result.Words[result.Words.Count - 1]);
MemoryStream pwdMemoryStream = new MemoryStream();
pwdAudio.WriteToAudioStream(pwdMemoryStream);
if (!IsValidPwd(pwdMemoryStream))
{
string badPwd = System.IO.Path.GetTempPath() +
"BadPwd" +
(new Random()).Next().ToString() +
".wav";
FileStream waveStream = new FileStream(badPwd, FileMode.Create);
pwdAudio.WriteToWaveStream(waveStream);
waveStream.Flush();
waveStream.Close();
SpeechUI.SendTextFeedback(eventArgs.Result, "Invalid Password", false);
}
}
};
grammar.Enabled = true;
_recognizer.LoadGrammar(grammar);
UpdateGrammarTree(_grammarTreeView, _recognizer);
}
Thread Safety
Any public static (Shared in Visual Basic) members of this type are thread safe. Any instance members are not guaranteed to be thread safe.
See Also
Reference
Microsoft.Speech.Recognition Namespace
Other Resources
Add Semantics to a GrammarBuilder Grammar (Microsoft.Speech)
Use a SemanticResultKey to Extract a SemanticResultValue (Microsoft.Speech)