In automatic speech recognition, a stochastic language model (LM) predicts the probability of the next word on the basis of previously recognized words. For the recognition of dictated speech this method works reasonably well since sentences are typically well-formed and reliable estimation of the probabilities is possible on the basis of large amounts of written text material. However, for spontaneous speech the situation is quite different: disfluencies distort the normal flow of sentences and written transcripts of spontaneous speech are too scarce to train good stochastic LMs. Both factors contribute to the poor performance of automatic speech recognizers on spontaneous input. In this paper we investigate how one specific approach to di...
In spontaneous speech, speakers segment their speech into intonational phrases, and make repairs to ...
Unlike rehearsed and prepared speech, spontaneous speech contains high occurrence of disfluencies, l...
Spontaneous speech is full of acoustic disfluencies that rarely appear in read or laboratory speech....
In automatic speech recognition, a statistical language model (LM) predicts the probability of the n...
Compared to dictation systems, recognition systems for spontaneous speech still perform rather poorl...
In this paper, we investigate the effect of disfluent repeti-tions in spontaneous speech recognition...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 43-46.1. Introduction -- 2. Literature review -- 3. LSTM nois...
Automatic speech recognition systems achieve good performance when they have to transcribe prepared ...
Previous works in English have revealed that disfluencies follow regular patterns and that incorpora...
Previous works in English have revealed that disfluencies follow regular patterns and that incorpora...
In this paper we present a system which automatically cor-rects disfluencies such as repairs and res...
In state-of-the-art large vocabulary automatic recognition systems, a large statistical language mod...
The demand of intelligent machines that may recognize the spoken speech and respond in a natural vo...
Three experiments investigated listeners' ability to detect disfluency in spontaneous speech. All em...
Three experiments investigated listeners' ability to detect disfluency in spontaneous speech. All em...
In spontaneous speech, speakers segment their speech into intonational phrases, and make repairs to ...
Unlike rehearsed and prepared speech, spontaneous speech contains high occurrence of disfluencies, l...
Spontaneous speech is full of acoustic disfluencies that rarely appear in read or laboratory speech....
In automatic speech recognition, a statistical language model (LM) predicts the probability of the n...
Compared to dictation systems, recognition systems for spontaneous speech still perform rather poorl...
In this paper, we investigate the effect of disfluent repeti-tions in spontaneous speech recognition...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 43-46.1. Introduction -- 2. Literature review -- 3. LSTM nois...
Automatic speech recognition systems achieve good performance when they have to transcribe prepared ...
Previous works in English have revealed that disfluencies follow regular patterns and that incorpora...
Previous works in English have revealed that disfluencies follow regular patterns and that incorpora...
In this paper we present a system which automatically cor-rects disfluencies such as repairs and res...
In state-of-the-art large vocabulary automatic recognition systems, a large statistical language mod...
The demand of intelligent machines that may recognize the spoken speech and respond in a natural vo...
Three experiments investigated listeners' ability to detect disfluency in spontaneous speech. All em...
Three experiments investigated listeners' ability to detect disfluency in spontaneous speech. All em...
In spontaneous speech, speakers segment their speech into intonational phrases, and make repairs to ...
Unlike rehearsed and prepared speech, spontaneous speech contains high occurrence of disfluencies, l...
Spontaneous speech is full of acoustic disfluencies that rarely appear in read or laboratory speech....