Mitsubishi Electric Corporation announced that it has developed a dialogue-summarising technology based on its AI technology Maisart® (Mitsubishi Electric’s AI creates the State-of-the- ART in technology) which automatically generates accurate written summaries of spoken conversation, thereby enabling call-centre staffers to roughly halve the time they need to prepare final reports after calls, as determined in preliminary tests conducted at a Mitsubishi Electric call centre.
Fig 1: Mitsubishi Customer Support Centre
Source: https://www.mitsubishielectric.com/news/2021/0317.html
Key Features:
- Automatically generates written records and halves final report preparation time
Recordings of call-centre dialogues prepared with conventional speech-recognition technology typically contain extraneous utterances, broken speech, etc., making it difficult for the software to generate useful written records of the dialogues. Mitsubishi Electric’s new technology (Fig. 2), however, learns dialogue contexts to accurately determine meanings, including colloquial and semantical expressions. It then uses data from past reports to correct broken speech, grammatical errors, word choices, etc. to generate complete natural sentences.
Next, it extracts the most similar and shortest sentences from past reports edited by staffers and then finally produces a summarised written record. Internal tests showed that Mitsubishi Electric’s new technology not only dramatically condenses Japanese text volume, but about 90% of the text is also usable compared to about 30% in the case of conventional technology, which enables call-centre staffers to roughly halve the time they require to manually prepare their final reports.
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2. Incrementally learns manual corrections to gradually improve correction accuracy
When people call to inquire about new products, etc., it is difficult to generate accurate records of these conversations automatically since conventional software cannot refer to call histories and past reports covering similar topics. To overcome this obstacle, Mitsubishi Electric’s new AI technology steadily refreshes and updates its knowledge by referring to recently edited reports to learn how staffers manually convert broken syntax, colloquial expressions, homonyms, etc. into more natural language.
Fig 2: Summarisation Process
Source: https://www.mitsubishielectric.com/news/2021/0317.html
Also, Mitsubishi Electric will evaluate its new technology through demonstration tests at the company’s own call centre from March 2021, aiming eventually to use it to generate records of phone conversations with customers regarding product malfunctions, product inquiries, etc.
[With inputs from agencies]