Phonological studies suggest that the typical subword units such as phones or phonemes used in automatic speech recognition systems can be decomposed into a set of features based on the articulators used to produce the sound. Most of the current approaches to integrate articulatory feature (AF) representations into an automatic speech recognition (ASR) system are based on determinis-tic knowledge-based phoneme-to-AF relationship. In this paper, we propose a novel two stage approach in the framework of probabilistic lexical modeling to integrate AF representations into an ASR system. In the first stage, the rela-tionship between acoustic feature observations and various AFs is modeled. In the second stage, a probabilistic relationship betwee...
In this paper, we propose a novel framework to integrate artic-ulatory features (AFs) into HMM- base...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...
Phonological studies suggest that the typical subword units such as phones or phonemes used in autom...
Standard hidden Markov model (HMM) based automatic speech recogni-tion (ASR) systems use phonemes as...
Kirchhoff K. Robust speech recognition using articulatory information. Bielefeld (Germany): Bielefel...
One of the key challenges involved in building statistical automatic speech recog-nition (ASR) syste...
A probabilistic and statistical framework is presented for automatic speech recognition based on a p...
Kirchhoff K, Fink GA, Sagerer G. Combining acoustic and articulatory feature information for robust ...
We report on investigations, conducted at the 2006 JHU Summer Workshop, of the use of articulatory f...
There is growing interest in using graphemes as subword units, especially in the context of the rapi...
Articulatory feature (AF) modelling of speech has received a considerable amount of attention in aut...
We describe a dynamic Bayesian network for articulatory feature recognition. The model is intended t...
Standard hidden Markov model (HMM) based automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems use phonemes as ...
This paper describes the use of dynamic Bayesian networks for the task of articulatory feature recog...
In this paper, we propose a novel framework to integrate artic-ulatory features (AFs) into HMM- base...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...
Phonological studies suggest that the typical subword units such as phones or phonemes used in autom...
Standard hidden Markov model (HMM) based automatic speech recogni-tion (ASR) systems use phonemes as...
Kirchhoff K. Robust speech recognition using articulatory information. Bielefeld (Germany): Bielefel...
One of the key challenges involved in building statistical automatic speech recog-nition (ASR) syste...
A probabilistic and statistical framework is presented for automatic speech recognition based on a p...
Kirchhoff K, Fink GA, Sagerer G. Combining acoustic and articulatory feature information for robust ...
We report on investigations, conducted at the 2006 JHU Summer Workshop, of the use of articulatory f...
There is growing interest in using graphemes as subword units, especially in the context of the rapi...
Articulatory feature (AF) modelling of speech has received a considerable amount of attention in aut...
We describe a dynamic Bayesian network for articulatory feature recognition. The model is intended t...
Standard hidden Markov model (HMM) based automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems use phonemes as ...
This paper describes the use of dynamic Bayesian networks for the task of articulatory feature recog...
In this paper, we propose a novel framework to integrate artic-ulatory features (AFs) into HMM- base...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...
In this paper we show that there is measurable information in the articulatory system which can help...