Speech Translation: Difference between revisions

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Tanja Schultz received her Ph.D. and Masters in Computer Science from University Karlsruhe, Germany in 2000 and 1995 respectively and got a German Masters in Mathematics, Sports, and Education Science from the University of Heidelberg, Germany in 1990. She joined Carnegie Mellon University in 2000 and is a faculty member of the Language Technologies Institute as a Research Computer Scientist.
Tanja Schultz received her Ph.D. and Masters in Computer Science from University Karlsruhe, Germany in 2000 and 1995 respectively and got a German Masters in Mathematics, Sports, and Education Science from the University of Heidelberg, Germany in 1990. She joined Carnegie Mellon University in 2000 and is a faculty member of the Language Technologies Institute as a Research Computer Scientist.
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== Date ==
== Date ==
* 14:00, March 27, 2007
* 15:00, Tuesday, March 27, 2007
* IST, QA amphiteatre, South Tower (Chemistry)
* IST, QA1.3, South Tower (Chemistry)


== Speaker ==
== Speaker ==

Revision as of 19:08, 23 March 2007

Tanja Schultz received her Ph.D. and Masters in Computer Science from University Karlsruhe, Germany in 2000 and 1995 respectively and got a German Masters in Mathematics, Sports, and Education Science from the University of Heidelberg, Germany in 1990. She joined Carnegie Mellon University in 2000 and is a faculty member of the Language Technologies Institute as a Research Computer Scientist.

Her research activities center around language independent and language adaptive speech recognition but also include large vocabulary continuous speech recognition systems, human-machine interfaces for spontaneous and conversational speech, speech translation, as well as language and speaker identification approaches. With a particular area of expertise in multilingual approaches, she performs research on portability of speech processing systems to many different languages.

In 2001 Tanja Schultz was awarded with the FZI price for her outstanding Ph.D. thesis on language independent and language adaptive speech recognition. In 2002 she received the Allen Newell Medal for Research Excellence from Carnegie Mellon for her contribution to Speech-to-Speech Translation and the ISCA best paper award for her publication on language independent acoustic modeling. In 2005 she was awarded the Carnegie Mellon Language Technologies Institute Junior Faculty Chair. Tanja Schultz is the author of more than 80 articles published in books, journals, and proceedings. She is a member of the IEEE Computer Society, the European Language Resource Association, the Society of Computer Science (GI) in Germany, and currently serves on several program and review panels.

Date

  • 15:00, Tuesday, March 27, 2007
  • IST, QA1.3, South Tower (Chemistry)

Speaker

  • Tanja Schultz

Abstract

(tba)