Roberto Pieraccini

Roberto Pieraccini
Born (1955-11-15) November 15, 1955
Genova, Italy
Nationality US, Italian
Fields speech recognition, spoken dialog systems, natural language understanding, multimodal interaction
Website
http://robertopieraccini.com

Roberto Pieraccini (born 15 November 1955 in Genoa, Italy) is an Italian and US electrical engineer working in the field of speech recognition, natural language understanding, and spoken dialog systems. He is currently the Director of Advanced Conversational Technologies at Jibo, Inc. He has been an active contributor to speech research and technology since 1981. He obtained a degree in electrical engineering from the University of Pisa in 1980 with a thesis on the equalization of data channels. After his graduation, between 1981 and 1989 he worked at CSELT (Centro Studi e Laboratori Telecomunicazioni), the then Italian telephone company's research center, at Bell Labs (Murray Hill, NJ) between 1990 and 1995, and AT&T Labs (Florham Park, NJ) between 1995 and 1999. In 1999 he was Director of the Natural Dialog group at SpeechWorks International until the company was acquired by Scansoft in 2003, and then held a position of manager for the Advanced Conversational Technologies department at IBM Research (Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY) from 2003 and 2005. He served as the Chief Technology Officer at SpeechCycle from 2005 to 2011. Between 2012 and 2013 he was the Chief Executive Officer of the International Computer Science Institute.

He was the elected Chair of the IEEE Speech and Language Technical Committee (SLTC) between 2007 and 2008, and on the board of several international conferences and events. He was a member of the editorial boards of the IEEE Signal Processing Magazine and of the International Journal of Speech Technology. He was also the general co-chair of the SIGdial Conference on Dialog and Discourse, held in London on September 2009, and the general technical program chair of Interspeech 2011 held in Florence, Italy, on August 2011. During his career he authored more than 120 articles, book chapters, and conference publications in the fields of speech recognition, language modeling, optical character recognition, and dialog systems.[1] He was elevated to the grade of Fellow by IEEE in 2010 for contributions to statistical natural language understanding and spoken dialog management and learning.[2] He is also a Fellow of ISCA, the International Speech Communication Association, and member of the AVIOS board.

He is the author of The Voice in the Machine, published by MIT Press in 2011, a general audience book on the history, technology, and the business of computers that understand speech.

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