Windows 10 has a built-in feature that allows users to access their computer with a voice command. This feature is called “Hey Cortana,” and it can be accessed by pressing the Windows key + C, typing “Hey Cortana,” and pressing Enter. To use this feature, you first need to enable it. To do this, open the Settings app on your computer and click on the “Personalization” button. Under “Accessibility,” click on the “Voice” tab and make sure that the “Hey Cortana” option is enabled. Once this option is enabled, you can use voice commands to access different features on your computer. For example, you can say “Hey Cortana, open YouTube” to open YouTube on your computer. You can also say “Hey Cortana, show me my calendar for tomorrow” to see your calendar for tomorrow. ..

How to Set Up Voice Access

Windows 11, like Windows 10, includes voice control as an accessibility feature. Windows Speech Recognition isn’t enabled by default, so that’s where we’ll start.

Click the Start button and type “Settings” into the search bar, and then click “Open” or hit Enter. Alternatively, you can click the small gear icon in the new Start Menu.

Look at the left-hand side of the Settings window, and click “Accessibility.” It will be near the bottom of the list.

Scroll down until you reach a section titled “Interaction,” and then click “Speech.”

Click the switch next to “Windows Speech Recognition.”

You’ll get a popup that will walk you through some configuration options. There are a few things to keep in mind:

Use the best microphone you can reasonably afford. Voice recognition and natural language processing are not perfect, and trying to get it working well with distorted, muddy audio will be difficult. If you need speech recognition to work as well as possible, especially in situations where it is the primary means of controlling your Windows 11 PC, you should provide it with documents to review.

RELATED: What Is Natural Language Processing, and How Does It Work?

How to Improve Your Results

You can provide the voice recognition software with more samples of your voice if you’re not getting the results you want. That option has not been moved into the new Settings app yet — it is still buried in the Control Panel.

Click the Start button, type “speech recognition” into the search bar, look for the search result with “Control Panel” displayed under it, and then click “Open.”

Click “Train Your Computer to Better Understand You” and follow all of the instructions. Remember to speak clearly, but in a way that is comfortable for you.

The process will probably take a few minutes. The more data you provide to the speech recognition model, the more accurate it will be when interpreting your instructions. You can train the model multiple times, and each time you do, it should improve the accuracy.

It is also important to learn the correct syntax when issuing commands your computer. While computers are much more proficient at interpreting instructions than they used to be, it still helps to be as precise as possible. Microsoft’s website has extensive documentation that details exactly what commands Windows Speech Recognition is programmed to recognize and how to utilize them.

If you’re wondering exactly how precise Windows Speech Recognition can be, it might interest you do know that the vast majority of this article was written using voice-to-text after only a single training session. The only significant difficulty dictating this article with Windows Speech Recognition was capitalization, hyperlinks, and formatting. Those required some manual tweaking, but that is hardly a problem. After adding additional training data, the recognition accuracy was vastly improved — it is absolutely worth taking the time to do if you’re going to be using the voice controls with any regularity.