Network Working Group                                            D. Oran
Request for Comments: 4313                           Cisco Systems, Inc.
Category: Informational                                    December 2005


               Requirements for Distributed Control of
                 Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR),
      Speaker Identification/Speaker Verification (SI/SV), and
                    Text-to-Speech (TTS) Resources

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

  This document outlines the needs and requirements for a protocol to
  control distributed speech processing of audio streams.  By speech
  processing, this document specifically means automatic speech
  recognition (ASR), speaker recognition -- which includes both speaker
  identification (SI) and speaker verification (SV) -- and
  text-to-speech (TTS).  Other IETF protocols, such as SIP and Real
  Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP), address rendezvous and control for
  generalized media streams.  However, speech processing presents
  additional requirements that none of the extant IETF protocols
  address.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
     1.1. Document Conventions .......................................3
  2. SPEECHSC Framework ..............................................4
     2.1. TTS Example ................................................5
     2.2. Automatic Speech Recognition Example .......................6
     2.3. Speaker Identification example .............................6
  3. General Requirements ............................................7
     3.1. Reuse Existing Protocols ...................................7
     3.2. Maintain Existing Protocol Integrity .......................7
     3.3. Avoid Duplicating Existing Protocols .......................7
     3.4. Efficiency .................................................8
     3.5. Invocation of Services .....................................8
     3.6. Location and Load Balancing ................................8



Oran                         Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


     3.7. Multiple Services ..........................................8
     3.8. Multiple Media Sessions ....................................8
     3.9. Users with Disabilities ....................................9
     3.10. Identification of Process That Produced Media or
           Control Output ............................................9
  4. TTS Requirements ................................................9
     4.1. Requesting Text Playback ...................................9
     4.2. Text Formats ...............................................9
          4.2.1. Plain Text ..........................................9
          4.2.2. SSML ................................................9
          4.2.3. Text in Control Channel ............................10
          4.2.4. Document Type Indication ...........................10
     4.3. Control Channel ...........................................10
     4.4. Media Origination/Termination by Control Elements .........10
     4.5. Playback Controls .........................................10
     4.6. Session Parameters ........................................11
     4.7. Speech Markers ............................................11
  5. ASR Requirements ...............................................11
     5.1. Requesting Automatic Speech Recognition ...................11
     5.2. XML .......................................................11
     5.3. Grammar Requirements ......................................12
          5.3.1. Grammar Specification ..............................12
          5.3.2. Explicit Indication of Grammar Format ..............12
          5.3.3. Grammar Sharing ....................................12
     5.4. Session Parameters ........................................12
     5.5. Input Capture .............................................12
  6. Speaker Identification and Verification Requirements ...........13
     6.1. Requesting SI/SV ..........................................13
     6.2. Identifiers for SI/SV .....................................13
     6.3. State for Multiple Utterances .............................13
     6.4. Input Capture .............................................13
     6.5. SI/SV Functional Extensibility ............................13
  7. Duplexing and Parallel Operation Requirements ..................13
     7.1. Full Duplex Operation .....................................14
     7.2. Multiple Services in Parallel .............................14
     7.3. Combination of Services ...................................14
  8. Additional Considerations (Non-Normative) ......................14
  9. Security Considerations ........................................15
     9.1. SPEECHSC Protocol Security ................................15
     9.2. Client and Server Implementation and Deployment ...........16
     9.3. Use of SPEECHSC for Security Functions ....................16
  10. Acknowledgements ..............................................17
  11. References ....................................................18
     11.1. Normative References .....................................18
     11.2. Informative References ...................................18






Oran                         Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


1.  Introduction

  There are multiple IETF protocols for establishment and termination
  of media sessions (SIP [6]), low-level media control (Media Gateway
  Control Protocol (MGCP) [7] and Media Gateway Controller (MEGACO)
  [8]), and media record and playback (RTSP [9]).  This document
  focuses on requirements for one or more protocols to support the
  control of network elements that perform Automated Speech Recognition
  (ASR), speaker identification or verification (SI/SV), and rendering
  text into audio, also known as Text-to-Speech (TTS).  Many multimedia
  applications can benefit from having automatic speech recognition
  (ASR) and text-to-speech (TTS) processing available as a distributed,
  network resource.  This requirements document limits its focus to the
  distributed control of ASR, SI/SV, and TTS servers.

  There is a broad range of systems that can benefit from a unified
  approach to control of TTS, ASR, and SI/SV.  These include
  environments such as Voice over IP (VoIP) gateways to the Public
  Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), IP telephones, media servers, and
  wireless mobile devices that obtain speech services via servers on
  the network.

  To date, there are a number of proprietary ASR and TTS APIs, as well
  as two IETF documents that address this problem [13], [14].  However,
  there are serious deficiencies to the existing documents.  In
  particular, they mix the semantics of existing protocols yet are
  close enough to other protocols as to be confusing to the
  implementer.

  This document sets forth requirements for protocols to support
  distributed speech processing of audio streams.  For simplicity, and
  to remove confusion with existing protocol proposals, this document
  presents the requirements as being for a "framework" that addresses
  the distributed control of speech resources.  It refers to such a
  framework as "SPEECHSC", for Speech Services Control.

1.1.  Document Conventions

  In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
  "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
  and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [3].










Oran                         Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


2.  SPEECHSC Framework

  Figure 1 below shows the SPEECHSC framework for speech processing.

                         +-------------+
                         | Application |
                         |   Server    |\
                         +-------------+ \ SPEECHSC
           SIP, VoiceXML,  /              \
            etc.          /                \
          +------------+ /                  \    +-------------+
          |   Media    |/       SPEECHSC     \---| ASR, SI/SV, |
          | Processing |-------------------------| and/or TTS  |
      RTP |   Entity   |           RTP           |    Server   |
     =====|            |=========================|             |
          +------------+                         +-------------+

                      Figure 1: SPEECHSC Framework

  The "Media Processing Entity" is a network element that processes
  media.  It may be a pure media handler, or it may also have an
  associated SIP user agent, VoiceXML browser, or other control entity.
  The "ASR, SI/SV, and/or TTS Server" is a network element that
  performs the back-end speech processing.  It may generate an RTP
  stream as output based on text input (TTS) or return recognition
  results in response to an RTP stream as input (ASR, SI/SV).  The
  "Application Server" is a network element that instructs the Media
  Processing Entity on what transformations to make to the media
  stream.  Those instructions may be established via a session protocol
  such as SIP, or provided via a client/server exchange such as
  VoiceXML.  The framework allows either the Media Processing Entity or
  the Application Server to control the ASR or TTS Server using
  SPEECHSC as a control protocol, which accounts for the SPEECHSC
  protocol appearing twice in the diagram.

  Physical embodiments of the entities can reside in one physical
  instance per entity, or some combination of entities.  For example, a
  VoiceXML [11] gateway may combine the ASR and TTS functions on the
  same platform as the Media Processing Entity.  Note that VoiceXML
  gateways themselves are outside the scope of this protocol.
  Likewise, one can combine the Application Server and Media Processing
  Entity, as would be the case in an interactive voice response (IVR)
  platform.

  One can also decompose the Media Processing Entity into an entity
  that controls media endpoints and entities that process media
  directly.  Such would be the case with a decomposed gateway using
  MGCP or MEGACO.  However, this decomposition is again orthogonal to



Oran                         Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  the scope of SPEECHSC.  The following subsections provide a number of
  example use cases of the SPEECHSC, one each for TTS, ASR, and SI/SV.
  They are intended to be illustrative only, and not to imply any
  restriction on the scope of the framework or to limit the
  decomposition or configuration to that shown in the example.

2.1.  TTS Example

  This example illustrates a simple usage of SPEECHSC to provide a
  Text-to-Speech service for playing announcements to a user on a phone
  with no display for textual error messages.  The example scenario is
  shown below in Figure 2.  In the figure, the VoIP gateway acts as
  both the Media Processing Entity and the Application Server of the
  SPEECHSC framework in Figure 1.

                                     +---------+
                                    _|   SIP   |
                                  _/ |  Server |
               +-----------+  SIP/   +---------+
               |           |  _/
   +-------+   |   VoIP    |_/
   | POTS  |___| Gateway   |   RTP   +---------+
   | Phone |   | (SIP UA)  |=========|         |
   +-------+   |           |\_       | SPEECHSC|
               +-----------+  \      |   TTS   |
                               \__   |  Server |
                            SPEECHSC |         |
                                   \_|         |
                                     +---------+

              Figure 2: Text-to-Speech Example of SPEECHSC

  The Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS) phone on the left attempts to
  make a phone call.  The VoIP gateway, acting as a SIP UA, tries to
  establish a SIP session to complete the call, but gets an error, such
  as a SIP "486 Busy Here" response.  Without SPEECHSC, the gateway
  would most likely just output a busy signal to the POTS phone.
  However, with SPEECHSC access to a TTS server, it can provide a
  spoken error message.  The VoIP gateway therefore constructs a text
  error string using information from the SIP messages, such as "Your
  call to 978-555-1212 did not go through because the called party was
  busy".  It then can use SPEECHSC to establish an association with a
  SPEECHSC server, open an RTP stream between itself and the server,
  and issue a TTS request for the error message, which will be played
  to the user on the POTS phone.






Oran                         Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


2.2.  Automatic Speech Recognition Example

  This example illustrates a VXML-enabled media processing entity and
  associated application server using the SPEECHSC framework to supply
  an ASR-based user interface through an Interactive Voice Response
  (IVR) system.  The example scenario is shown below in Figure 3.  The
  VXML-client corresponds to the "media processing entity", while the
  IVR application server corresponds to the "application server" of the
  SPEECHSC framework of Figure 1.

                                     +------------+
                                     |    IVR     |
                                    _|Application |
                              VXML_/ +------------+
               +-----------+  __/
               |           |_/       +------------+
   PSTN Trunk  |   VoIP    | SPEECHSC|            |
  =============| Gateway   |---------| SPEECHSC   |
               |(VXML voice|         |   ASR      |
               | browser)  |=========|  Server    |
               +-----------+   RTP   +------------+

             Figure 3: Automatic Speech Recognition Example

  In this example, users call into the service in order to obtain stock
  quotes.  The VoIP gateway answers their PSTN call.  An IVR
  application feeds VXML scripts to the gateway to drive the user
  interaction.  The VXML interpreter on the gateway directs the user's
  media stream to the SPEECHSC ASR server and uses SPEECHSC to control
  the ASR server.

  When, for example, the user speaks the name of a stock in response to
  an IVR prompt, the SPEECHSC ASR server attempts recognition of the
  name, and returns the results to the VXML gateway.  The VXML gateway,
  following standard VXML mechanisms, informs the IVR Application of
  the recognized result.  The IVR Application can then do the
  appropriate information lookup.  The answer, of course, can be sent
  back to the user using text-to-speech.  This example does not show
  this scenario, but it would work analogously to the scenario shown in
  section Section 2.1.

2.3.  Speaker Identification example

  This example illustrates using speaker identification to allow
  voice-actuated login to an IP phone.  The example scenario is shown
  below in Figure 4.  In the figure, the IP Phone acts as both the
  "Media Processing Entity" and the "Application Server" of the
  SPEECHSC framework in Figure 1.



Oran                         Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  +-----------+         +---------+
  |           |   RTP   |         |
  |   IP      |=========| SPEECHSC|
  |  Phone    |         |   TTS   |
  |           |_________|  Server |
  |           | SPEECHSC|         |
  +-----------+         +---------+

                Figure 4: Speaker Identification Example

  In this example, a user speaks into a SIP phone in order to get
  "logged in" to that phone to make and receive phone calls using his
  identity and preferences.  The IP phone uses the SPEECHSC framework
  to set up an RTP stream between the phone and the SPEECHSC SI/SV
  server and to request verification.  The SV server verifies the
  user's identity and returns the result, including the necessary login
  credentials, to the phone via SPEECHSC.  The IP Phone may use the
  identity directly to identify the user in outgoing calls, to fetch
  the user's preferences from a configuration server, or to request
  authorization from an Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting
  (AAA) server, in any combination.  Since this example uses SPEECHSC
  to perform a security-related function, be sure to note the
  associated material in Section 9.

3.  General Requirements

3.1.  Reuse Existing Protocols

  To the extent feasible, the SPEECHSC framework SHOULD use existing
  protocols.

3.2.  Maintain Existing Protocol Integrity

  In meeting the requirement of Section 3.1, the SPEECHSC framework
  MUST NOT redefine the semantics of an existing protocol.  Said
  differently, we will not break existing protocols or cause
  backward-compatibility problems.

3.3.  Avoid Duplicating Existing Protocols

  To the extent feasible, SPEECHSC SHOULD NOT duplicate the
  functionality of existing protocols.  For example, network
  announcements using SIP [12] and RTSP [9] already define how to
  request playback of audio.  The focus of SPEECHSC is new
  functionality not addressed by existing protocols or extending
  existing protocols within the strictures of the requirement in





Oran                         Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  Section 3.2.  Where an existing protocol can be gracefully extended
  to support SPEECHSC requirements, such extensions are acceptable
  alternatives for meeting the requirements.

  As a corollary to this, the SPEECHSC should not require a separate
  protocol to perform functions that could be easily added into the
  SPEECHSC protocol (like redirecting media streams, or discovering
  capabilities), unless it is similarly easy to embed that protocol
  directly into the SPEECHSC framework.

3.4.  Efficiency

  The SPEECHSC framework SHOULD employ protocol elements known to
  result in efficient operation.  Techniques to be considered include:

  o  Re-use of transport connections across sessions
  o  Piggybacking of responses on requests in the reverse direction
  o  Caching of state across requests

3.5.  Invocation of Services

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST be compliant with the IAB Open Pluggable
  Edge Services (OPES) [4] framework.  The applicability of the
  SPEECHSC protocol will therefore be specified as occurring between
  clients and servers at least one of which is operating directly on
  behalf of the user requesting the service.

3.6.  Location and Load Balancing

  To the extent feasible, the SPEECHSC framework SHOULD exploit
  existing schemes for supporting service location and load balancing,
  such as the Service Location Protocol [13] or DNS SRV records [14].
  Where such facilities are not deemed adequate, the SPEECHSC framework
  MAY define additional load balancing techniques.

3.7.  Multiple Services

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST permit multiple services to operate on a
  single media stream so that either the same or different servers may
  be performing speech recognition, speaker identification or
  verification, etc., in parallel.

3.8.  Multiple Media Sessions

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST allow a 1:N mapping between session and
  RTP channels.  For example, a single session may include an outbound
  RTP channel for TTS, an inbound for ASR, and a different inbound for
  SI/SV (e.g., if processed by different elements on the Media Resource



Oran                         Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  Element).  Note: All of these can be described via SDP, so if SDP is
  utilized for media channel description, this requirement is met "for
  free".

3.9.  Users with Disabilities

  The SPEECHSC framework must have sufficient capabilities to address
  the critical needs of people with disabilities.  In particular, the
  set of requirements set forth in RFC 3351 [5] MUST be taken into
  account by the framework.  It is also important that implementers of
  SPEECHSC clients and servers be cognizant that some interaction
  modalities of SPEECHSC may be inconvenient or simply inappropriate
  for disabled users.  Hearing-impaired individuals may find TTS of
  limited utility.  Speech-impaired users may be unable to make use of
  ASR or SI/SV capabilities.  Therefore, systems employing SPEECHSC
  MUST provide alternative interaction modes or avoid the use of speech
  processing entirely.

3.10.  Identification of Process That Produced Media or Control Output

  The client of a SPEECHSC operation SHOULD be able to ascertain via
  the SPEECHSC framework what speech process produced the output.  For
  example, an RTP stream containing the spoken output of TTS should be
  identifiable as TTS output, and the recognized utterance of ASR
  should be identifiable as having been produced by ASR processing.

4.  TTS Requirements

4.1.  Requesting Text Playback

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST allow a Media Processing Entity or
  Application Server, using a control protocol, to request the TTS
  Server to play back text as voice in an RTP stream.

4.2.  Text Formats

4.2.1.  Plain Text

  The SPEECHSC framework MAY assume that all TTS servers are capable of
  reading plain text.  For reading plain text, framework MUST allow the
  language and voicing to be indicated via session parameters.  For
  finer control over such properties, see [1].

4.2.2.  SSML

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support Speech Synthesis Markup Language
  (SSML)[1] <speak> basics, and SHOULD support other SSML tags.  The
  framework assumes all TTS servers are capable of reading SSML



Oran                         Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  formatted text.  Internationalization of TTS in the SPEECHSC
  framework, including multi-lingual output within a single utterance,
  is accomplished via SSML xml:lang tags.

4.2.3.  Text in Control Channel

  The SPEECHSC framework assumes all TTS servers accept text over the
  SPEECHSC connection for reading over the RTP connection.  The
  framework assumes the server can accept text either "by value"
  (embedded in the protocol) or "by reference" (e.g., by de-referencing
  a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) embedded in the protocol).

4.2.4.  Document Type Indication

  A document type specifies the syntax in which the text to be read is
  encoded.  The SPEECHSC framework MUST be capable of explicitly
  indicating the document type of the text to be processed, as opposed
  to forcing the server to infer the content by other means.

4.3.  Control Channel

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST be capable of establishing the control
  channel between the client and server on a per-session basis, where a
  session is loosely defined to be associated with a single "call" or
  "dialog".  The protocol SHOULD be capable of maintaining a long-lived
  control channel for multiple sessions serially, and MAY be capable of
  shorter time horizons as well, including as short as for the
  processing of a single utterance.

4.4.  Media Origination/Termination by Control Elements

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST NOT require the controlling element
  (application server, media processing entity) to accept or originate
  media streams.  Media streams MAY source & sink from the controlled
  element (ASR, TTS, etc.).

4.5.  Playback Controls

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support "VCR controls" for controlling
  the playout of streaming media output from SPEECHSC processing, and
  MUST allow for servers with varying capabilities to accommodate such
  controls.  The protocol SHOULD allow clients to state what controls
  they wish to use, and for servers to report which ones they honor.
  These capabilities include:







Oran                         Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  o  The ability to jump in time to the location of a specific marker.
  o  The ability to jump in time, forwards or backwards, by a specified
     amount of time.  Valid time units MUST include seconds, words,
     paragraphs, sentences, and markers.
  o  The ability to increase and decrease playout speed.
  o  The ability to fast-forward and fast-rewind the audio, where
     snippets of audio are played as the server moves forwards or
     backwards in time.
  o  The ability to pause and resume playout.
  o  The ability to increase and decrease playout volume.

  These controls SHOULD be made easily available to users through the
  client user interface and through per-user customization capabilities
  of the client.  This is particularly important for hearing-impaired
  users, who will likely desire settings and control regimes different
  from those that would be acceptable for non-impaired users.

4.6.  Session Parameters

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support the specification of session
  parameters, such as language, prosody, and voicing.

4.7.  Speech Markers

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST accommodate speech markers, with
  capability at least as flexible as that provided in SSML [1].  The
  framework MUST further provide an efficient mechanism for reporting
  that a marker has been reached during playout.

5.  ASR Requirements

5.1.  Requesting Automatic Speech Recognition

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST allow a Media Processing Entity or
  Application Server to request the ASR Server to perform automatic
  speech recognition on an RTP stream, returning the results over
  SPEECHSC.

5.2.  XML

  The SPEECHSC framework assumes that all ASR servers support the
  VoiceXML speech recognition grammar specification (SRGS) for speech
  recognition [2].








Oran                         Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


5.3.  Grammar Requirements

5.3.1.  Grammar Specification

  The SPEECHSC framework assumes all ASR servers are capable of
  accepting grammar specifications either "by value" (embedded in the
  protocol) or "by reference" (e.g., by de-referencing a URI embedded
  in the protocol).  The latter MUST allow the indication of a grammar
  already known to, or otherwise "built in" to, the server.  The
  framework and protocol further SHOULD exploit the ability to store
  and later retrieve by reference large grammars that were originally
  supplied by the client.

5.3.2.  Explicit Indication of Grammar Format

  The SPEECHSC framework protocol MUST be able to explicitly convey the
  grammar format in which the grammar is encoded and MUST be extensible
  to allow for conveying new grammar formats as they are defined.

5.3.3.  Grammar Sharing

  The SPEECHSC framework SHOULD exploit sharing grammars across
  sessions for servers that are capable of doing so.  This supports
  applications with large grammars for which it is unrealistic to
  dynamically load.  An example is a city-country grammar for a weather
  service.

5.4.  Session Parameters

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST accommodate at a minimum all of the
  protocol parameters currently defined in Media Resource Control
  Protocol (MRCP) [10] In addition, there SHOULD be a capability to
  reset parameters within a session.

5.5.  Input Capture

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support a method directing the ASR Server
  to capture the input media stream for later analysis and tuning of
  the ASR engine.












Oran                         Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


6.  Speaker Identification and Verification Requirements

6.1.  Requesting SI/SV

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST allow a Media Processing Entity to
  request the SI/SV Server to perform speaker identification or
  verification on an RTP stream, returning the results over SPEECHSC.

6.2.  Identifiers for SI/SV

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST accommodate an identifier for each
  verification resource and permit control of that resource by ID,
  because voiceprint format and contents are vendor specific.

6.3.  State for Multiple Utterances

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST work with SI/SV servers that maintain
  state to handle multi-utterance verification.

6.4.  Input Capture

  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support a method for capturing the input
  media stream for later analysis and tuning of the SI/SV engine.  The
  framework may assume all servers are capable of doing so.  In
  addition, the framework assumes that the captured stream contains
  enough timestamp context (e.g., the NTP time range from the RTP
  Control Protocol (RTCP) packets, which corresponds to the RTP
  timestamps of the captured input) to ascertain after the fact exactly
  when the verification was requested.

6.5.  SI/SV Functional Extensibility

  The SPEECHSC framework SHOULD be extensible to additional functions
  associated with SI/SV, such as prompting, utterance verification, and
  retraining.

7.  Duplexing and Parallel Operation Requirements

  One very important requirement for an interactive speech-driven
  system is that user perception of the quality of the interaction
  depends strongly on the ability of the user to interrupt a prompt or
  rendered TTS with speech.  Interrupting, or barging, the speech
  output requires more than energy detection from the user's direction.
  Many advanced systems halt the media towards the user by employing
  the ASR engine to decide if an utterance is likely to be real speech,
  as opposed to a cough, for example.





Oran                         Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


7.1.  Full Duplex Operation

  To achieve low latency between utterance detection and halting of
  playback, many implementations combine the speaking and ASR
  functions.  The SPEECHSC framework MUST support such full-duplex
  implementations.

7.2.  Multiple Services in Parallel

  Good spoken user interfaces typically depend upon the ease with which
  the user can accomplish his or her task.  When making use of speaker
  identification or verification technologies, user interface
  improvements often come from the combination of the different
  technologies: simultaneous identity claim and verification (on the
  same utterance), simultaneous knowledge and voice verification (using
  ASR and verification simultaneously).  Using ASR and verification on
  the same utterance is in fact the only way to support rolling or
  dynamically-generated challenge phrases (e.g., "say 51723").  The
  SPEECHSC framework MUST support such parallel service
  implementations.

7.3.  Combination of Services

  It is optionally of interest that the SPEECHSC framework support more
  complex remote combination and controls of speech engines:

  o  Combination in series of engines that may then act on the input or
     output of ASR, TTS, or Speaker recognition engines.  The control
     MAY then extend beyond such engines to include other audio input
     and output processing and natural language processing.
  o  Intermediate exchanges and coordination between engines.
  o  Remote specification of flows between engines.

  These capabilities MAY benefit from service discovery mechanisms
  (e.g., engines, properties, and states discovery).

8.  Additional Considerations (Non-Normative)

  The framework assumes that Session Description Protocol (SDP) will be
  used to describe media sessions and streams.  The framework further
  assumes RTP carriage of media.  However, since SDP can be used to
  describe other media transport schemes (e.g., ATM) these could be
  used if they provide the necessary elements (e.g., explicit
  timestamps).







Oran                         Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  The working group will not be defining distributed speech recognition
  (DSR) methods, as exemplified by the European Telecommunications
  Standards Institute (ETSI) Aurora project.  The working group will
  not be recreating functionality available in other protocols, such as
  SIP or SDP.

  TTS looks very much like playing back a file.  Extending RTSP looks
  promising for when one requires VCR controls or markers in the text
  to be spoken.  When one does not require VCR controls, SIP in a
  framework such as Network Announcements [12] works directly without
  modification.

  ASR has an entirely different set of characteristics.  For barge-in
  support, ASR requires real-time return of intermediate results.
  Barring the discovery of a good reuse model for an existing protocol,
  this will most likely become the focus of SPEECHSC.

9.  Security Considerations

  Protocols relating to speech processing must take security and
  privacy into account.  Many applications of speech technology deal
  with sensitive information, such as the use of Text-to-Speech to read
  financial information.  Likewise, popular uses for automatic speech
  recognition include executing financial transactions and shopping.

  There are at least three aspects of speech processing security that
  intersect with the SPEECHSC requirements -- securing the SPEECHSC
  protocol itself, implementing and deploying the servers that run the
  protocol, and ensuring that utilization of the technology for
  providing security functions is appropriate.  Each of these aspects
  in discussed in the following subsections.  While some of these
  considerations are, strictly speaking, out of scope of the protocol
  itself, they will be carefully considered and accommodated during
  protocol design, and will be called out as part of the applicability
  statement accompanying the protocol specification(s).  Privacy
  considerations are discussed as well.

9.1.  SPEECHSC Protocol Security

  The SPEECHSC protocol MUST in all cases support authentication,
  authorization, and integrity, and SHOULD support confidentiality.
  For privacy-sensitive applications, the protocol MUST support
  confidentiality.  We envision that rather than providing
  protocol-specific security mechanisms in SPEECHSC itself, the
  resulting protocol will employ security machinery of either a
  containing protocol or the transport on which it runs.  For example,
  we will consider solutions such as using Transport Layer Security
  (TLS) for securing the control channel, and Secure Realtime Transport



Oran                         Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  Protocol (SRTP) for securing the media channel.  Third-party
  dependencies necessitating transitive trust will be minimized or
  explicitly dealt with through the authentication and authorization
  aspects of the protocol design.

9.2.  Client and Server Implementation and Deployment

  Given the possibly sensitive nature of the information carried,
  SPEECHSC clients and servers need to take steps to ensure
  confidentiality and integrity of the data and its transformations to
  and from spoken form.  In addition to these general considerations,
  certain SPEECHSC functions, such as speaker verification and
  identification, employ voiceprints whose privacy, confidentiality,
  and integrity must be maintained.  Similarly, the requirement to
  support input capture for analysis and tuning can represent a privacy
  vulnerability because user utterances are recorded and could be
  either revealed or replayed inappropriately.  Implementers must take
  care to prevent the exploitation of any centralized voiceprint
  database and the recorded material from which such voiceprints may be
  derived.  Specific actions that are recommended to minimize these
  threats include:

  o  End-to-end authentication, confidentiality, and integrity
     protection (like TLS) of access to the database to minimize the
     exposure to external attack.
  o  Database protection measures such as read/write access control and
     local login authentication to minimize the exposure to insider
     threats.
  o  Copies of the database, especially ones that are maintained at
     off-site locations, need the same protection as the operational
     database.

  Inappropriate disclosure of this data does not as of the date of this
  document represent an exploitable threat, but quite possibly might in
  the future.  Specific vulnerabilities that might become feasible are
  discussed in the next subsection.  It is prudent to take measures
  such as encrypting the voiceprint database and permitting access only
  through programming interfaces enforcing adequate authorization
  machinery.

9.3.  Use of SPEECHSC for Security Functions

  Either speaker identification or verification can be used directly as
  an authentication technology.  Authorization decisions can be coupled
  with speaker verification in a direct fashion through
  challenge-response protocols, or indirectly with speaker
  identification through the use of access control lists or other
  identity-based authorization mechanisms.  When so employed, there are



Oran                         Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  additional security concerns that need to be addressed through the
  use of protocol security mechanisms for clients and servers.  For
  example, the ability to manipulate the media stream of a speaker
  verification request could inappropriately permit or deny access
  based on impersonation, or simple garbling via noise injection,
  making it critical to properly secure both the control and data
  channels, as recommended above.  The following issues specific to the
  use of SI/SV for authentication should be carefully considered:

  1.  Theft of voiceprints or the recorded samples used to construct
      them represents a future threat against the use of speaker
      identification/verification as a biometric authentication
      technology.  A plausible attack vector (not feasible today) is to
      use the voiceprint information as parametric input to a
      text-to-speech synthesis system that could mimic the user's voice
      accurately enough to match the voiceprint.  Since it is not very
      difficult to surreptitiously record reasonably large corpuses of
      voice samples, the ability to construct voiceprints for input to
      this attack would render the security of voice-based biometric
      authentication, even using advanced challenge-response
      techniques, highly vulnerable.  Users of speaker verification for
      authentication should monitor technological developments in this
      area closely for such future vulnerabilities (much as users of
      other authentication technologies should monitor advances in
      factoring as a way to break asymmetric keying systems).
  2.  As with other biometric authentication technologies, a downside
      to the use of speech identification is that revocation is not
      possible.  Once compromised, the biometric information can be
      used in identification and authentication to other independent
      systems.
  3.  Enrollment procedures can be vulnerable to impersonation if not
      protected both by protocol security mechanisms and some
      independent proof of identity.  (Proof of identity may not be
      needed in systems that only need to verify continuity of identity
      since enrollment, as opposed to association with a particular
      individual.

  Further discussion of the use of SI/SV as an authentication
  technology, and some recommendations concerning advantages and
  vulnerabilities, can be found in Chapter 5 of [15].

10.  Acknowledgements

  Eric Burger wrote the original version of these requirements and has
  continued to contribute actively throughout their development.  He is
  a co-author in all but formal authorship, and is instead acknowledged
  here as it is preferable that working group co-chairs have
  non-conflicting roles with respect to the progression of documents.



Oran                         Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


11.  References

11.1.  Normative References

  [1]  Walker, M., Burnett, D., and A. Hunt, "Speech Synthesis Markup
       Language (SSML) Version 1.0", W3C
       REC REC-speech-synthesis-20040907, September 2004.

  [2]  McGlashan, S. and A. Hunt, "Speech Recognition Grammar
       Specification Version 1.0", W3C REC REC-speech-grammar-20040316,
       March 2004.

  [3]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
       Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [4]  Floyd, S. and L. Daigle, "IAB Architectural and Policy
       Considerations for Open Pluggable Edge Services", RFC 3238,
       January 2002.

  [5]  Charlton, N., Gasson, M., Gybels, G., Spanner, M., and A. van
       Wijk, "User Requirements for the Session Initiation Protocol
       (SIP) in Support of Deaf, Hard of Hearing and Speech-impaired
       Individuals", RFC 3351, August 2002.

11.2.  Informative References

  [6]   Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, "SIP:
        Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.

  [7]   Andreasen, F. and B. Foster, "Media Gateway Control Protocol
        (MGCP) Version 1.0", RFC 3435, January 2003.

  [8]   Groves, C., Pantaleo, M., Ericsson, LM., Anderson, T., and T.
        Taylor, "Gateway Control Protocol Version 1", RFC 3525,
        June 2003.

  [9]   Schulzrinne, H., Rao, A., and R. Lanphier, "Real Time Streaming
        Protocol (RTSP)", RFC 2326, April 1998.

  [10]  Shanmugham, S., Monaco, P., and B. Eberman, "MRCP: Media
        Resource Control Protocol", Work in Progress.









Oran                         Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


  [11]  World Wide Web Consortium, "Voice Extensible Markup Language
        (VoiceXML) Version 2.0", W3C Working Draft , April 2002,
        <http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-voicexml20-20020424/>.

  [12]  Burger, E., Ed., Van Dyke, J., and A. Spitzer, "Basic Network
        Media Services with SIP", RFC 4240, December 2005.

  [13]  Guttman, E., Perkins, C., Veizades, J., and M. Day, "Service
        Location Protocol, Version 2", RFC 2608, June 1999.

  [14]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
        specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
        February 2000.

  [15]  Committee on Authentication Technologies and Their Privacy
        Implications, National Research Council, "Who Goes There?:
        Authentication Through the Lens of Privacy", Computer Science
        and Telecommunications Board (CSTB) , 2003,
        <http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10656.html/ >.

Author's Address

  David R. Oran
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  7 Ladyslipper Lane
  Acton, MA
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]






















Oran                         Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4313          Speech Services Control Requirements     December 2005


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
  retain all their rights.

  This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
  OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
  ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
  INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
  INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Intellectual Property

  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
  made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information
  on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
  found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.

  Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
  assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
  attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
  such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
  specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
  http://www.ietf.org/ipr.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
  rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-
  [email protected].

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.







Oran                         Informational                     [Page 20]