Automatic speech recognition requires many hours of transcribed speech recordings in order for an acoustic model to be effectively trained. However, recording speech corpora is time-consuming and expensive, so such quantities of data exist only for a handful of languages — there are many languages for which little or no data exist. Given that there are acoustic similarities between different languages, it may be fruitful to use data from a well-supported source language for the task of training a recogniser in a target language with little training data. Since most languages do not share a common phonetic inventory, we propose an indirect way of transferring information from a source language model to a target language model. Tandem feature...
Multilingual speech recognition obviously involves numerous research challenges, including common ph...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...
© 2014 IEEE. Speech signals are produced by the smooth and continuous movements of the human articul...
Automatic speech recognition requires many hours of transcribed speech recordings in order for an a...
In recent years, the features derived from posteriors of a multilayer perceptron (MLP), known as tan...
Multilingual speech recognition systems mostly benefit low resource languages but suffer degradation...
Phonological-based features (articulatory features, AFs) describe the movements of the vocal organ w...
Multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems mostly benefit low resource languages but su...
Articulatory features (AFs) provide language-independent attribute by exploiting the speech producti...
In recent years, the features derived from posteriors of a multilayer perceptron (MLP), known as tan...
In this paper we describe an approach that both creates crosslingual acoustic monophone model sets f...
One promising approach for building ASR systems for less-resourced languages is cross-lingual adapta...
Exploiting cross-lingual resources is an effective way to compensate for data scarcity of low resour...
Recent studies have shown that speech recognizers may benefit from data in languages other than the ...
The use of articulatory features, such as place and manner of articulation, has been shown to reduce...
Multilingual speech recognition obviously involves numerous research challenges, including common ph...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...
© 2014 IEEE. Speech signals are produced by the smooth and continuous movements of the human articul...
Automatic speech recognition requires many hours of transcribed speech recordings in order for an a...
In recent years, the features derived from posteriors of a multilayer perceptron (MLP), known as tan...
Multilingual speech recognition systems mostly benefit low resource languages but suffer degradation...
Phonological-based features (articulatory features, AFs) describe the movements of the vocal organ w...
Multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems mostly benefit low resource languages but su...
Articulatory features (AFs) provide language-independent attribute by exploiting the speech producti...
In recent years, the features derived from posteriors of a multilayer perceptron (MLP), known as tan...
In this paper we describe an approach that both creates crosslingual acoustic monophone model sets f...
One promising approach for building ASR systems for less-resourced languages is cross-lingual adapta...
Exploiting cross-lingual resources is an effective way to compensate for data scarcity of low resour...
Recent studies have shown that speech recognizers may benefit from data in languages other than the ...
The use of articulatory features, such as place and manner of articulation, has been shown to reduce...
Multilingual speech recognition obviously involves numerous research challenges, including common ph...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...
© 2014 IEEE. Speech signals are produced by the smooth and continuous movements of the human articul...