Datasets:

Modalities:
Tabular
Text
Formats:
json
ArXiv:
Libraries:
Datasets
Dask
License:

file naming explanation

#2
by pyp1 - opened

does the last digit in the id indicate the order of the segment in the original book/audio? for example id_A: large/10022/essayoncriticism_1505_librivox_64kb_mp3/essayoncriticism_03_pope_64kb_7 ends with 7 and id_B: large/10022/essayoncriticism_1505_librivox_64kb_mp3/essayoncriticism_03_pope_64kb_8 ends with 8, and this means that id_A is right before id_B in the book?

It seems that this is not the case because id_A's starting timestamp is 51.04 while id_B's starting timestamp is 434.6.

If so, given a id, is there a way to find it's neighboring segments?

Thanks!

If so, given a id, is there a way to find it's neighboring segments?

I think you can only sort the durations and find the neighboring segments with algorithms like binary search.

BTW, why do you need neighboring segments?

Sign up or log in to comment