
CTI
Glossary
A dynamic and up-to-date glossary of terms used
in voice processing, fax processing and computer telephony integration.
| A-law A method of coding an analogue signal digitally which is used mainly in Europe and Asia. Similar to mu-law, but uses a different amplitude table mapping, so that recordings made with A-law coding are not compatible with mu-law. |
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| ACD Automatic Call Distributor. A specialised form of PBX used in call centres. Provides call queuing, different agent groups and managerial information. Often has more exchange lines than agent positions. |
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| ACTIUS The Association of Computer Telephone Integration Users and Suppliers |
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| ADPCM Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation. A method of digitally compressing PCM voice data where each digital value (sample) represents an increase or decrease from the previous sample, rather than an absolute amplitude value. |
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| ADSI Analogue Display Services Interface. A standard for the transmission of text information over a telephone line to display text information on devices such as screen phones and to accept DTMF responses from the user. |
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| AEB Analogue Expansion Bus. An analogue voice processing bus used to connect additional analogue devices to a standard Dialogic voice processing card. Used, for example, to connect voice recognition or fax resources. |
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| Agent A member of a call centre who receives inbound or makes outbound calls (or both!). |
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| Analogue (As in analogue phone line or analogue transmission) - where an electric signal carrying information is represented by a continuously variable voltage or amplitude - i.e. not digital. |
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| ANI Refers to Automatic Number Identification of the calling party.USA term for CLI. |
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| API Application Programming Interface. |
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| ASR Automatic Speech Recognition - see also voice recognition. |
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| Audiotex A term originally used to mean the provision of spoken information over the telephone (from 'audio text'), but now more commonly used to refer to the provision of passive or interactive voice services over premium rate telephone lines. For example weather forecasts, horoscopes, talking classifieds. |
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| Auto
Attendant An automated voice processing and call processing system which allows callers to automatically route themselves to a person or department within a company |
| Call
Processing A system which routes calls, usually as the result of a caller's interaction with a Voice Processing System. |
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| CallerID A service which allows calling line identity information to be displayed on a special phone or display. |
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| Calling
Line Identity See CLI. |
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| CAS 1) Channel Associated Signalling. 2) Communicating Applications Standard - a joint Intel / DCA API for controlling fax modems. CAS allows an application to submit files to a queue for faxing when the modem is available. |
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| CLI Calling Line Identity - information received from the telephone exchange giving the calling party's telephone number. Sometimes referred to as CLID. It is referred to as ANI is the USA. |
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| CO Central Office - the 'public' telephone switches used by the telecomms companies to route calls. Known in the UK as 'telephone exchange' |
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| CPE Customer Premises Equipment. |
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| CSI Called Subscriber Identifier - the name or number sent by a fax machine to identify its origin. |
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| CTI Computer Telephony Integration - the linking of computer systems to telephone switches to provide advanced features such as power dialling, the automatic routing of incoming calls to an appropriate employee, or to automatically display caller's account details on an agent's terminal before the call is answered. CTI can exist with or without voice processing and is often misused (in the author's opinion!) to describe 'stand-alone' voice mail or IVR systems which do not establish any data communications with the PBX. Also known as CST (Computer Supported Telephony), CIT (Computer Integrated Telephony) and CAT (Computer Aided Telephony). |
| HMM Hidden Markov Model - a mathematical technique commonly used to implement speech recognition algorithms. |
| PABX Private Automatic Branch Exchange - now more commonly referred to as just PBX (see below). |
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| PBX Private Branch Exchange - the telephone switching system used within individual companies. |
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| PC Personal Computer - A computer which conforms to the hardware and software model developed by IBM in the 1980's, and is now widely used as an open platform for developing voice and fax processing systems. |
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| PCM Pulse Code Modulation - a method of representing an analogue signal digitally. This is achieved by sampling the amplitude of the analogue signal at regular intervals and representing each sample by a digital value. The maximum frequency which can be represented in this manner is half the frequency of the sampling frequency. |
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| PEB PCM Expansion Bus - A digital bus used to carry voice and fax information between voice and fax processing components from different suppliers within a PC. Supports up to 32 individual voice channels. |
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| POTS Plain Old Telephone Service - used to refer to basic analogue telephone connections with no advanced features. |
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| Power
Dialler An automated system which makes outbound calls for a call centre agent - see also predictive dialler and preview dialler. |
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| Predictive
Dialler An automatic system which places outbound calls and uses statistical modelling to start dialling the next call before an agent is free to handle it, on the grounds that by the time the call has been answered an agent should be available. |
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| Premium
Rate Describes a range of telephony tariffs where the 'service provider' receives a percentage of the call cost, paid by the telecomms company. Frequently used to offer information and entertainment services over the telephone network. |
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| Preview
Dialler An automated system which shows the details of the next person to be called on an agent's screen. The agent can then allow the preview dialler to automatically place the call, or can skip these details and view the next contact's details. |
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| PRI Primary Rate Interface. A term used to describe an ISDN connection based on E-1 or T-1 trunks. Provides 30, 64K bits per second voice or data streams on E-1 (European) circuits or 23 64K bits per second voice or data streams on T-1 (USA) circuits. Often referred to in the UK as ISDN30. |
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| Protocol A pre-defined sequence of signals used to control flow of information between two systems - frequently between a telephone exchange and some customer premises equipment, or between two computer systems. |
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| PSTN The Public Switched Telephone Network. |
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| Pulse The signals generated from an older style, non tone, telephone. |
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| Pulse
Recognition A system which can understand the click sounds generated by a pulse phone so that users of such phones can control voice mail and IVR systems. Like speech recognition, pulse recognition is not 100% accurate, so care is needed when designing systems using such techniques. |
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| Pulse
to tone converter A system which performs pulse recognition and then generates the corresponding DTMF tone. Used to give IVR and voice mail systems with tone recognition the ability to respond to callers with pulse phones. |
| Q931 An ISDN signalling system - as used with EuroISDN. |
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| Queuing The ability of an ACD or voice processing system to form a 'queue' of incoming callers destined for an agent or agent group. |
| T-1 The US equivalent of E-1. T-1 lines operate at 1.544 M bits per second and carry a maximum of 24 voice calls. Similar to E-1, but as there are is no spare bandwidth to carry signalling information. Robbed-bit signalling is used. |
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| TAPI Telephony Application Programming Interface. A Microsoft / Intel initiative to provide a common interface for developing telephony applications from the desktop. TAPI allows developers of call and voice processing systems to write code which is hardware independent - allowing applications to work equally well with a TAPI compliant voice / fax modem, voice processing card or PBX driver software. TAPI allows implementation of 1st party CTI. |
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| TCP/IP Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol. A data protocol for transmitting information between computer systems (usually UNIX based) and across the Internet. |
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| Text-to-Speech The synthetic generation of voice constructed from pure text input. Text to Speech techniques are used where an IVR system has to speak out information which cannot be pre-recorded (such as speaking out e-mails) or where the data to be spoken would be impractical to have pre-recorded (such as rapidly changing product names, or vast customer databases). The quality of text to speech synthesis is improving, but should only be used when pre-recorded speech cannot, due to its robotic sound and poorer intelligibility than pre-recorded speech. |
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| Third
Party CTI A method of implementing CTI where the computer views the PBX as if it were the operator. i.e. it is aware of the state of all calls on the PBX. TSAPI allows implementation of third party CTI. See also First Party CTI. |
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| TIFF Tagged Image File Format. - a standard method of digitally encoding picture information. TIFF Class F (TIFF/F) is commonly used in fax processing systems. |
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| Timed
Break Recall A common method of signalling a recall to a PBX in the UK. Similar to a flash-hook, but typically of a shorter duration (often around 150ms). |
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| Touch
tone A non technical term used to describe DTMF. |
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| Trunk Used to mean a T-1 or E-1 digital connection. Also referred to as a pipe or span. |
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| TSAPI Telephony Server Application Programming Interface. A Novell / AT&T initiative to provide a common interface for developing telephony applications. Unlike TAPI, TSAPI allows implementation of 3rd party CTI. |
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| TTS See Text-to-Speech |
| WAV (As in WAV file) - A type of computer file used to store a voice file digitally - commonly used by Microsoft Windows applications. |
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| Wallboard A device which is connected to an ACD or call processing system and which displays information to call centre agents about the current state of the call centre's queue - such as the number of callers waiting or the longest waiting time. |
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| Wink A telephony function provided by voice processing hardware to request calling line identity information from the telephone exchange. Wink is used in the USA, but not in the UK. |
The origination or ownership of this glossary has not been established and it
is reproduced assuming that it is not a proprietary document.
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