Adobe Speech To Text V12.0 For Premiere Pro 2023
By v12.0, Adobe had expanded its lexicon to support over 18 languages and dialects, including:
The v12.0 update specifically improved phoneme recognition for medial and final consonant sounds in Japanese and Korean, which were historically problematic for earlier versions.
If you are already on Premiere Pro 2023, v12.0 is a no-brainer. It represents a maturation of the Speech to Text tool. It moves the feature from a "cool beta-like trick" to a professional, reliable studio standard. Adobe Speech to Text v12.0 for Premiere Pro 2023
Who benefits most?
Adobe Premiere Pro 2023 introduced a shift in video editing with Speech to Text, a feature that utilizes AI to automate transcription and captioning. This functionality, which is included in Creative Cloud subscriptions, significantly reduces the time and cost associated with manual transcription and third-party services. Core Capabilities of Speech to Text By v12
The Speech to Text tool in Premiere Pro 2023 offers a comprehensive suite of features designed to streamline the post-production process:
If there is one thing every video editor can agree on, it’s this: we hate typing. We love cutting, color grading, and mixing audio, but transcribing interviews and manually adding captions? That is the definition of a "necessary evil." The v12
For the past few years, Adobe’s Speech to Text feature has been a lifesaver in Premiere Pro. But with the release of Adobe Speech to Text v12.0 for Premiere Pro 2023, it feels like the assistant just got a major promotion.
Let’s dive into what makes version 12.0 a game-changer for your post-production pipeline.
Within the code of Speech to Text v12.0, data miners found references to "Sentiment Analysis" and "Automatic Scene Detection based on Keyword Density." Adobe hasn't officially confirmed it, but v12.0 lays the groundwork for an AI that will automatically highlight "emotional peaks" in an interview based on word choice and pacing.
Furthermore, the engine currently supports English, Spanish, and French for phonetic punctuation (adding exclamation marks based on tone). Expect that to expand to all 18 languages by the next major release.