Sensory, Inc. is an American company which develops software AI technologies for speech, sound and vision.[1][2] It is based in Santa Clara, California.

Sensory, Inc.
Industry
Founded1994
HeadquartersSanta Clara, California, U.S.
Websitehttps://www.sensory.com/

Sensory’s technologies have shipped in over three billion products from hundreds of leading consumer electronics manufacturers including AT&T, Hasbro, Huawei, Google, Amazon, Samsung, LG, Mattel, Motorola, Plantronics, GoPro, Sony, Tencent, Garmin, LG, Microsoft, Lenovo, and more. Sensory has over 60 issued patents covering speech recognition in consumer electronics, biometric authentication, sensor/speech combinations, wake word technology, and more.

History

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Sensory, Inc. was founded in 1994, originally as Sensory Circuits, by Forrest Mozer, Mike Mozer and Todd Mozer. The three had also co-founded ESS Technology years earlier. In 1999 Sensory acquired Fluent Speech Technologies, which was formed and started by a group of professors out of the Oregon Graduate Institute (formerly OGI, now OHSU). Fluent Speech Technologies developed high performance embedded speech engines, the technology from this acquisition is now the core technology used throughout Sensory's chip and software line.[3]

Company timeline

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  • 1994 – Founded
  • 1995 – Introduces the RSC 164 - first commercially successful speech recognition IC
  • 1998 – Introduces first speaker verification IC
  • 2000 – Acquires Oregon based Fluent-Speech Technologies
  • 2002 – Acquires Texas Instruments line of speech output ICs (the SC series)
  • 2007 – Introduces first Voice User Interface for Bluetooth silicon (CSR BC-5) - BlueGenie
  • 2008 - Sensory and BlueAnt partner on the V1 - Revolutionary new Bluetooth headset with a voice user interface. First wearable to use a voice user interface for control and best-reviewed speech recognition product in history
  • 2009 – Introduced world's smallest text to speech system (TTS) and Truly HandsfreeTM Triggers/ wake words.
  • 2010 – Introduced the NLP-5x – First Natural Language Voice Processor and TrulyHandsfree wake words in SDKs for Android, iOS, Linux, and Windows. NLP5x used the first generation of TrulyHandsfree wake words with low power and enhanced accuracy.
  • 2011 – Sensory partners with Google and Microsoft to enable TrulyHandsfree as a front end to Goog411 and Bing411
  • 2012 – Partnered with Tensilica to offer ultra-low power TrulyHandsfree wake words; introduced Speaker Verification and Speaker Identification for mobile phones and other consumer electronics.
  • 2012 - TrulyHandsfree released into Samsung's Galaxy S2 for "Hey Galaxy" wake word
  • 2013 – TrulyHandsfree wake words migrated to many new platforms and began shipping as MotoVoice in the Google-owned MotoX. Sensory's TrulyHandsfree in mobile takes off with the Galaxy S3 and S4 and Galaxy Note and is licensed into wearables like Google Glass.
  • 2014 – Announced new initiative in Vision; added LG and Motorola as customers; received the 2014 Global Mobile Award for Best Mobile Technology Breakthrough at the GSMA Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain (judges commented, "A big advance for the wearables market, this offers many benefits for consumers, increasing uptake and usage of many mobile apps, driving revenue for operators and content providers.")[4]
  • 2015-2018 - Licensed Google, Amazon, MSFT, Baidu, Huawei, ZTE, and many others with TrulyHandsfree wake words. Sensory develops first wake words for OK Google, Hey Siri, and Hey Cortana.
  • 2019 - Sensory launched two new solutions: SoundID, sound identification, and TrulyNatural, embedded large vocabulary speech recognition. Sensory also acquired Vocalize.ai, an independent testing lab.
  • 2020 - Sensory introduced VoiceHub, which allows the automated generation of wake words.
  • 2021 - Sensory expands VoiceHub with speech recognition and NLU capabilities. The company initiated a new cloud platform, SensoryCloud.ai.
  • 2022-Sensory rolls out SensoryCloud.ai with speech to text, text to speech, face & voice biometrics
  • 2024- Sensory Automotive & TrulyNatural Speech-to-text On-Device launched[5]

Technology and products

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Sensory originally developed both hardware (Integrated Circuit - IC or "chip") and software platforms but migrated to software only around 2005 and added cloud and hybrid computing capabilities in 2021. Sensory's RSC-164 IC (Integrated Circuit or "chip") was used on NASA's Mars Polar Lander in the Mars Microphone on the Lander.[6] Speech Synthesis SC-6x chips – acquired some speech synthesis technology from Texas Instruments.[7]

Sensory’s embedded AI solutions include the following:

  • TrulyHandsfree (THF) - wake word detection and phrase spotting.
  • TrulyNatural (TNL) - large vocabulary continuous speech recognition with NLU.
  • TrulySecure (TS) - face and voice biometrics.
  • TrulySecureSpeakerVerification (TSSV) - speaker and sound identification.
  • VoiceHub - Online portal for creating custom wake words and speech recognition models with NLU.
  • Sensory Automotive- Sensory Automotive is a full voice and vision suite of AI technologies that operate efficiently in the car without connecting to a network.[8]

The cloud initiative, SensoryCloud.ai, is targeting Speech To Text (STT), Text To Speech (TTS), Wake Word verification, face and voice recognition, and sound identification.

References

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  1. ^ "Sensory, Inc". Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on 3 December 2012.
  2. ^ TCZ Webmaster (21 August 2006). "Sensory Inc". The Commodore Zone. Archived from the original on 14 February 2012.
  3. ^ Rae-Dupree, Janet (2 January 2005). "Smaller, cheaper voice chip speaks loudly for future uses". San Jose Business Journal. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008.
  4. ^ "Best Mobile Technology Breakthrough".
  5. ^ Incorporated, Sensory (Jan 12, 2024). "Sensory Leads Automotive Technology Innovation With Groundbreaking AI Platform Unveiling At CES 2024". PRWeb. Retrieved 2024-04-04.
  6. ^ "Mars Microphone". The Planetary Society. Archived from the original on 27 January 2012.
  7. ^ Quan, Margaret (14 June 2001). "TI will exit dedicated speech-synthesis chips, transfer products to Sensory". EE Times. Archived from the original on 28 May 2012.
  8. ^ "Automotive AI". Sensory. Retrieved 2024-04-04.