Speech Recognition: Difference between revisions

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* Recognition of spontaneous speech
* Recognition of spontaneous speech
:This line of research is also recent at L2F. It started within the scope of broadcast news recognition, where spontaneous speech segments are characterized by a much higher word error rate, and progressed in two other totally different domains: the meeting domain (public meetings of university councils), and the classroom domain (EEC courses, national project LECTRA). The emphasis so far has been on processing disfluencies [Trancoso 2006].
:This line of research is also recent at L2F. It started within the scope of broadcast news recognition, where spontaneous speech segments are characterized by a much higher word error rate, and progressed in two other totally different domains: the meeting domain (public meetings of university councils), and the classroom domain (EEC courses, national project LECTRA). The emphasis so far has been on processing disfluencies [Trancoso 2006].
* Pronunciation models
* Pronunciation modeling
:The problem of pronunciation variation has been dealt with at the automatic alignment level by including alternative pronunciation rules [Trancoso02].

Revision as of 12:40, 29 June 2006

The most challenging aspects of speech recognition are the ones related to processing speech in widely different domains, spoken in a variety of dialects, and potentially adverse environments, and dealing with the characteristics of spontaneous speech: no punctuation, disfluencies, emotions, and overlapping turns. In this context, L2F’s activities have been recently concentrated in several research strands:

  • Broadcast news recognition
Our work in this area started in the scope of the European project ALERT. There are currently two PhD Theses on this topic.

See the first news of yesterday's news (RTP 8pm) in RealVideo format here.

  • Recognition in adverse environments
The field of robust speech recognition is relatively new at L2F. We are currently working on speech enhancement techniques using beam forming for a multi-user speaker environment. Our approach has a single array of 64 linearly spaced microphones.
  • Recognition of spontaneous speech
This line of research is also recent at L2F. It started within the scope of broadcast news recognition, where spontaneous speech segments are characterized by a much higher word error rate, and progressed in two other totally different domains: the meeting domain (public meetings of university councils), and the classroom domain (EEC courses, national project LECTRA). The emphasis so far has been on processing disfluencies [Trancoso 2006].
  • Pronunciation modeling
The problem of pronunciation variation has been dealt with at the automatic alignment level by including alternative pronunciation rules [Trancoso02].