Nowadays, most ASR (automatic speech recognition) systems deployed in industry are closed-vocabulary systems, meaning we have a limited vocabulary of words the system can recognize, and where pronunciations are provided to the system. Words out of this vocabulary are called out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words, for which either pronunciations or both spellings and pronunciations are not known to the system. The basic motivations of developing strategies to handle OOV words are: First, in the training phase, missing or wrong pronunciations of words in training data results in poor acoustic models. Second, in the test phase, words out of the vocabulary cannot be recognized at all, and mis-recognition of OOV words may affect recognition performance ...
Spoken term detection (STD) is a fundamental task for multimedia information retrieval. A major cha...
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) requires a strong language model to guide the acoustic model and ...
<p>Out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words can appear more than once in a conversation or over a period of tim...
A regular automatic speech recognizer works with a so-called recognition lexicon. This lexicon conta...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer...
Selecting the best prediction from a set of candidates is an essential problem for many spoken langu...
International audienceOut-of-vocabulary (OOV) words can pose a particular problem for automatic spee...
This paper presents initial studies on building a vocabulary self-learning speech recognition system...
Rapid deployment of automatic speech recognition (ASR) in new languages, with very limited data, is ...
This thesis deals with the problem of Out-Of-Vocabulary words in speech recognition. The standard re...
This dissertation considers the problem of information retrieval in speech. Today's speech retrieva...
Some practical uses of ASR have been implemented, including the transcription of meetings and the us...
This thesis concerns the problem of unknown or out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words in contin-uous speech r...
Despite the proliferation of speech-enabled applications and devices, speech-driven human-machine in...
In this paper, we tackle the problem of pronunciation inference and Out-of-Vocabulary (OOV) enrollme...
Spoken term detection (STD) is a fundamental task for multimedia information retrieval. A major cha...
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) requires a strong language model to guide the acoustic model and ...
<p>Out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words can appear more than once in a conversation or over a period of tim...
A regular automatic speech recognizer works with a so-called recognition lexicon. This lexicon conta...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer...
Selecting the best prediction from a set of candidates is an essential problem for many spoken langu...
International audienceOut-of-vocabulary (OOV) words can pose a particular problem for automatic spee...
This paper presents initial studies on building a vocabulary self-learning speech recognition system...
Rapid deployment of automatic speech recognition (ASR) in new languages, with very limited data, is ...
This thesis deals with the problem of Out-Of-Vocabulary words in speech recognition. The standard re...
This dissertation considers the problem of information retrieval in speech. Today's speech retrieva...
Some practical uses of ASR have been implemented, including the transcription of meetings and the us...
This thesis concerns the problem of unknown or out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words in contin-uous speech r...
Despite the proliferation of speech-enabled applications and devices, speech-driven human-machine in...
In this paper, we tackle the problem of pronunciation inference and Out-of-Vocabulary (OOV) enrollme...
Spoken term detection (STD) is a fundamental task for multimedia information retrieval. A major cha...
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) requires a strong language model to guide the acoustic model and ...
<p>Out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words can appear more than once in a conversation or over a period of tim...