This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic speech recognition (ASR). The durational and spectral effects of accentuation are investigated separately by manipulating the transition and observation probabilities in hidden Markov models. We also attempt to implement the undershoot hypothesis [1], which describes spectral reduction as a direct consequence of shortening. Our findings support the widespread belief that the transition probabilities, which indirectly model durational effects, are negligible, and that the distinction between accented and unaccented vowels is determined by the observation probabilities
In the presence of pronunciation variation and the masking ef-fects of additive noise, we investigat...
To deal with various sources of variability in the speech signal listeners compensate for acoustic c...
A series of vowel-identification experiments using gated consonant stimuli shows that English listen...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Four experiments explored the relative contributions of spectral content and phonetic labeling in ef...
This paper describes methods to improve the performance of English phoneme recognition from linguist...
Speech contains a variety of acoustic cues to auditory and phonetic contrasts that are exploited by ...
This paper investigates the effects of an unknown speech sample’s segmental content (the specific vo...
Speech contains a variety of acoustic cues to auditory and phonetic contrasts that are exploited by ...
This paper investigates the effects of an unknown speech sample’s segmental content (the specific vo...
To deal with various sources of variability in the speech signal listeners compensate for acoustic c...
In the presence of pronunciation variation and the masking ef-fects of additive noise, we investigat...
To deal with various sources of variability in the speech signal listeners compensate for acoustic c...
A series of vowel-identification experiments using gated consonant stimuli shows that English listen...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
This study focuses on the implementation of the phonetic effects of vowel accentuation in automatic ...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Four experiments explored the relative contributions of spectral content and phonetic labeling in ef...
This paper describes methods to improve the performance of English phoneme recognition from linguist...
Speech contains a variety of acoustic cues to auditory and phonetic contrasts that are exploited by ...
This paper investigates the effects of an unknown speech sample’s segmental content (the specific vo...
Speech contains a variety of acoustic cues to auditory and phonetic contrasts that are exploited by ...
This paper investigates the effects of an unknown speech sample’s segmental content (the specific vo...
To deal with various sources of variability in the speech signal listeners compensate for acoustic c...
In the presence of pronunciation variation and the masking ef-fects of additive noise, we investigat...
To deal with various sources of variability in the speech signal listeners compensate for acoustic c...
A series of vowel-identification experiments using gated consonant stimuli shows that English listen...