Air Safety Week Free e-Mail Newsletter Free Aviation Job Alerts
Home Avionics Aviation Maintenance Rotor & Wing Air Safety Week Aircraft Value News Regional Aviation News Very Light Jets
View by Category:  Military | Commercial | Business & General Aviation | Rotorcraft | Air Traffic Control | Maintenance
Advanced Search


Aviation Today Market Leaders
Subscribe
Jobs
Podcasts
Webinars
Videos
Blogs
Databases &
   Buyer's Guides

White Papers/
   Technical Reports/
   Supplements

Research Reports
Article Archives
Press Releases
From the PR Wires
Industry Links



Top Stories
Aviation e-letter
Financial Center
Calendar
Media Kits
About Us
Contact Us

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

QinetiQ Develops Voice Control of Aircraft

A QinetiQ technology that allows any pilot to control aircraft systems by voice command has successfully completed a new round of flight trails on a UK Army Air Corps Gazelle helicopter. QinetiQ's Direct Voice Input (DVI) system facilitates the direct-voice-input control of avionics equipment using standard aircrew helmet microphones and intercom and is speaker independent, meaning that the system does not need to recognize a specific user. It gives aircrew the ability to control aircraft systems using voice commands and access information without removing their hands from the flight controls or their eyes from the outside world. The system has been developed to help alleviate the demands on pilots presented by an increasing amount of technology in modern aircraft cockpits. Too much of a pilot's time can be spent looking "head-in" rather than "head-out" during sorties due to the advent of multi-function displays with menu structures many tiers deep. QinetiQ's DVI system means more time with hands on flying controls which is particularly important for single pilot operations or where one pilot is flying and another is performing a tactical role. QinetiQ's DVI has completed more than 30 hours of MoD-funded flight trials with command recognition rates in excess of 90 per cent for all users, providing effective speech control of avionics functions. Tony Wall, managing director of QinetiQ's Air Division said: "Voice recognition systems normally struggle with the high noise levels experienced in helicopters and need to be calibrated to recognize the speech patterns of individual users. These recent trials demonstrate that QinetiQ's DVI technology overcomes both of these shortfalls and enhances aircraft safety by maximizing a pilot's 'head out' time."

Post a Comment

Name:
Email:
Comments:

Please enter the letters or numbers you see in the image.

 
Your message will be reviewed before it is posted.

Copyright © 2009 Access Intelligence, LLC. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part
in any form or medium without express written permission of Access Intelligence, LLC is prohibited.