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Closed Captions from Speech Analysis
Posted by Brad Nall on September 9, 2013 at 3:16 pmis there some simple method I am missing to convert the speech analysis in to closed captions?
Jon Parke replied 11 years, 6 months ago 5 Members · 6 Replies -
6 Replies
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Kevin Monahan
September 9, 2013 at 4:31 pmHi Brad,
Sorry, there’s no way to do that, currently. Please make a feature request, if you like: https://www.adobe.com/go/wishThanks,
KevinKevin Monahan
Social Support Lead
Adobe After Effects
Adobe Premiere Pro
Adobe Systems, Inc.
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Jon Parke
January 8, 2014 at 9:17 pmI found a way to make closed captions from the Speech Analysis data. I posted it to the Adobe forum (https://forums.adobe.com/thread/1368502).
Go to https://www.nikse.dk/ and download Subtitle Edit (the latest beta portable version 3.3.12 allows you to convert the FLV cue point XML file that Adobe Premiere/Media Encoder creates). It is a free program and the portable version doesn’t even require it to be installed. I have been using it for the past couple days and think that it may just be better then the CPC software (Caption Maker) that I use at work. Once you bring the file into subtitle edit, select “Tools” from the top menu bar and select “Merge Short Lines” this will bring up a menu to combine all of those separated words and timings you get from Premiere/AME.
You can find the XML file on Windows at :
C:\Users\(your user name)\AppData\Local\Temp
Not sure where it is on the Mac.
It will look something like this: 13e88245-8fe6-4269-a9d2-172d2134a587_stt.xmlI contacted Nikolaj (the maker of Subtitle Edit) to see if he could help and he just added this functionality. It works great for me! Hope this helps someone else because this has frustrated me since Adobe added speech analysis.
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Glenn Wiedenhoeft
October 10, 2014 at 6:06 pmThanks! This is very good. The assumption for this work flow is that you already have a word-perfect transcript file (my case 🙂 – this makes the AME voice-to-text engine FAR more accurate, because it only has to find word timings – less deciphering of words. I used this workflow to produce a valid .srt file for use elsewhere. For work inside PrPro CC, it is indeed the missing bridge between speech recognition and caption editing.
Captiontube seemed promising, in that it is supposed to accept an ordinary .txt file as the transcript, but I could not get it to accept any movie URLs I entered.
If you do NOT have a literal transcript to start with, then the speech recognition in Camtasia Studio 8 (uses the Windows speech recognition engine, I think) is about the same (in)accuracy as AME. -
Itai Levin
November 3, 2014 at 11:31 pmDo you happen to have more information as to where I can find a link to download SubtitleEdit for Mac? So far all I’ve been able to find are .exe files. Any help is very much appreciated.
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Jon Parke
November 10, 2014 at 6:48 pmI’m sorry to say that Subtitle Edit is only for Windows right now. You will have to run Windows (or Linux if you use the Portable version) in Boot Camp or in virtual machine software like VMware Fusion to get subtitle edit to work on a Mac. At least as far as I know.
He does have an online editor on his website but I haven’t used it, so I can’t say how well it works. https://www.nikse.dk/SubtitleEdit/Online
You can always email Nikolaj at nikse.dk@gmail.com and see if he plans to support macs in the future.
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