Key Factors Impacting Audio Difficulty

Delve deeper into the factors that affect audio difficulty, the importance of understanding these elements, and how they influence the overall transcription process.

 

What Factors Have the Greatest Impact on Audio Difficulty?

Several key factors determine how difficult an audio file is to process:

  • Strong Dialects and Accents: These can cause significant difficulty for ASR and editors.

  • Overlapping Speakers: Multiple speakers talking at the same time increases the challenge of accurately transcribing the content.

  • Low Signal-to-Noise Ratio: Poor audio quality, with excessive background noise or distortion, greatly increases difficulty.

  • Unscripted Speech: Non-scripted speech, such as spontaneous conversation or rapid exchanges, is more difficult to transcribe accurately.

The more of these factors a file contains, and the longer they persist, the more difficult it becomes. If these factors vary significantly throughout a file, they will have an additional impact on the difficulty score.

 

Improving Audio Quality to Reduce Difficulty

Improving the quality of your audio can significantly lower the difficulty score and, consequently, the cost. Follow the best practices outlined in our Audio Recording Guidelines to help avoid common pitfalls like poor microphones, overlapping speech, and background noise. Proper recording techniques can prevent files from becoming unnecessarily difficult.

 

Tips and Best Practices

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