Models of speech recognition (by both human and machine) have traditionally assumed the phoneme to serve as the fundamental unit of phonetic and phonological analysis. However, phoneme-centric models have failed to provide a convincing theoretical account of the process by which the brain extracts meaning from the speech signal and have fared poorly in automatic recognition of natural, informal speech (e.g., the Switchboard corpus). Over the past five months the Switchboard Transcription Project has phonetically transcribed a portion of the Switchboard corpus in an effort to better understand the failure of phoneme-centric models for machine recognition of speech, as well as to provide a database through which to improve the performance of ...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
How do listeners understand what they are hearing? Humans hearing speech perform spoken word recogni...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...
A diagnostic evaluation of eight Switchboard-corpus recognition systems was conducted in order to as...
INTRODUCTION Pronunciations in spontaneous, conversational speech tend to be much more variable tha...
The specified subfield of computational linguistics and computer science can said to be li...
Transforming an acoustic signal to words is the gold standard in automatic speech recognition. Whil...
Phonemic models of spoken language are incapable of accommodating the patterns of pronunciation vari...
SWITCHBOARD (SWB) Corpus consists of 2438 conversations digitally recorded over long distance teleph...
In this article, we address the issue of using a continuous speech recognition tool to obtain phonet...
In this paper we present a set of techniques we employed in our Janus Recognition Toolkit (JRTk) Swi...
Contains fulltext : 27415.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Each time a word...
Norris, McQueen & Cutler present a detailed account of the decision stage of the phoneme monitoring ...
Speech processing by human listeners extracts meaning from acoustic input through intermediate steps...
The output of a speech recognition system is not always ideal for subsequent downstream processing, ...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
How do listeners understand what they are hearing? Humans hearing speech perform spoken word recogni...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...
A diagnostic evaluation of eight Switchboard-corpus recognition systems was conducted in order to as...
INTRODUCTION Pronunciations in spontaneous, conversational speech tend to be much more variable tha...
The specified subfield of computational linguistics and computer science can said to be li...
Transforming an acoustic signal to words is the gold standard in automatic speech recognition. Whil...
Phonemic models of spoken language are incapable of accommodating the patterns of pronunciation vari...
SWITCHBOARD (SWB) Corpus consists of 2438 conversations digitally recorded over long distance teleph...
In this article, we address the issue of using a continuous speech recognition tool to obtain phonet...
In this paper we present a set of techniques we employed in our Janus Recognition Toolkit (JRTk) Swi...
Contains fulltext : 27415.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Each time a word...
Norris, McQueen & Cutler present a detailed account of the decision stage of the phoneme monitoring ...
Speech processing by human listeners extracts meaning from acoustic input through intermediate steps...
The output of a speech recognition system is not always ideal for subsequent downstream processing, ...
We propose that the interface between phonology and phonetics is mediated by a transduction process ...
How do listeners understand what they are hearing? Humans hearing speech perform spoken word recogni...
Machine recognition of spoken language requires developing more robust recognition algorithms. The...