Having difficulty understanding people who aren't speaking the language as it's intended to
There is no single regional variation of English that's authoritative in 2021. Midwestern-accented American English has more native speakers or close enough variations that it probably exceeds the entire population of the British Isles. Is English with an Irish accent not speaking as intended? How about Yankee accents that make statements like "pahk da cah?" What about people who speak otherwise flawless, native profi
Iterating support is acceptable, but excluding these variations because it's hard to support them is not something actual speakers get to do on a daily basis if they live in an area with a confluence of regional influence.
That isn't the same thing at all. There are people who simply do not speak the language accurately, either due to regional dialect, laziness or physical limitations, that distort the language to the point that some words cannot be understood correctly. If someone pronounces the words "cot" and "cat" exactly the same, the ability of any AI or other human being to accurately delineate between those words is vastly reduced. Now you have to "think harder" and analyze the context of what they said and attempt
Cars use more gas when transporting Dutch people than Japanese people. Engineers claim that it's because Dutch people are a lot taller than Japanese people and hence heavier, but I know that the real reason is they're racist and intentionally made it that way to hold Asian people down.
Having difficulty understanding people who aren't speaking the language as it's intended to, such as old people with a stutter, is not bias.
There is no single regional variation of English that's authoritative in 2021. Midwestern-accented American English has more native speakers or close enough variations that it probably exceeds the entire population of the British Isles. Is English with an Irish accent not speaking as intended? How about Yankee accents that make statements like "pahk da cah?" What about people who speak otherwise flawless, native profi
Iterating support is acceptable, but excluding these variations because it's hard to support them is not something actual speakers get to do on a daily basis if they live in an area with a confluence of regional influence.
That isn't the same thing at all. There are people who simply do not speak the language accurately, either due to regional dialect, laziness or physical limitations, that distort the language to the point that some words cannot be understood correctly. If someone pronounces the words "cot" and "cat" exactly the same, the ability of any AI or other human being to accurately delineate between those words is vastly reduced. Now you have to "think harder" and analyze the context of what they said and attempt
It's bias in the training data used for the speech recognition systems.