Journal: Speech Communication

Volume 46, Issue 3-4

217 -- 219. Editorial
220 -- 251Yi Xu. Speech melody as articulatorily implemented communicative functions
252 -- 267Tanja Bänziger, Klaus R. Scherer. The role of intonation in emotional expressions
268 -- 283David House. Phrase-final rises as a prosodic feature in wh-questions in Swedish human-machine dialogue
284 -- 309Chiu-yu Tseng, Shao-huang Pin, Yehlin Lee, Hsin-Min Wang, Yong-cheng Chen. Fluent speech prosody: Framework and modeling
310 -- 325Hansjörg Mixdorff, Hartmut R. Pfitzinger. Analysing fundamental frequency contours and local speech rate in map task dialogs
326 -- 333Rolf Carlson, Julia Hirschberg, Marc Swerts. Cues to upcoming Swedish prosodic boundaries: Subjective judgment studies and acoustic correlates
334 -- 347D. J. Hirst. Form and function in the representation of speech prosody
348 -- 364Gérard Bailly, Bleicke Holm. SFC: A trainable prosodic model
365 -- 375Jan P. H. van Santen, Alexander Kain, Esther Klabbers, Taniya Mishra. Synthesis of prosody using multi-level unit sequences
376 -- 384Yoshinori Sagisaka, Takumi Yamashita, Yoko Kokenawa. Generation and perception of F::0:: markedness for communicative speech synthesis
385 -- 404Keikichi Hirose, Kentaro Sato, Yasufumi Asano, Nobuaki Minematsu. Synthesis of F::0:: contours using generation process model parameters predicted from unlabeled corpora: application to emotional speech synthesis
405 -- 417Takeshi Saitou, Masashi Unoki, Masato Akagi. Development of an F0 control model based on F0 dynamic characteristics for singing-voice synthesis
418 -- 439Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, Ken Chen, Jennifer Cole, Sarah Borys, Sung-Suk Kim, Aaron Cohen, Tong Zhang, Jeung-Yoon Choi, Heejin Kim, Taejin Yoon. Simultaneous recognition of words and prosody in the Boston University Radio Speech Corpus
440 -- 454Jin-Song Zhang, Satoshi Nakamura, Keikichi Hirose. Tone nucleus-based multi-level robust acoustic tonal modeling of sentential F0 variations for Chinese continuous speech tone recognition
455 -- 472Elizabeth Shriberg, Luciana Ferrer, Sachin S. Kajarekar, Anand Venkataraman, Andreas Stolcke. Modeling prosodic feature sequences for speaker recognition
473 -- 484Björn Granström, David House. Audiovisual representation of prosody in expressive speech communication

Volume 46, Issue 2

117 -- 118Eric Fosler-Lussier, William Byrne, Daniel Jurafsky. Editorial
119 -- 139Martine Adda-Decker, Philippe Boula de Mareüil, Gilles Adda, Lori Lamel. Investigating syllabic structures and their variation in spontaneous French
140 -- 152Jerome R. Bellegarda. Unsupervised, language-independent grapheme-to-phoneme conversion by latent analogy
153 -- 170Eric Fosler-Lussier, Ingunn Amdal, Hong-Kwang Jeff Kuo. A framework for predicting speech recognition errors
171 -- 188Thomas Hain. Implicit modelling of pronunciation variation in automatic speech recognition
189 -- 203Timothy J. Hazen, I. Lee Hetherington, Han Shu, Karen Livescu. Pronunciation modeling using a finite-state transducer representation
204 -- 216Stephanie Seneff, Chao Wang. Statistical modeling of phonological rules through linguistic hierarchies

Volume 46, Issue 1

1 -- 13Junho Park, Hanseok Ko. Effective acoustic model clustering via decision-tree with supervised learning
15 -- 36Olatunji O. Akande, Peter J. Murphy. Estimation of the vocal tract transfer function with application to glottal wave analysis
37 -- 51Katrin Kirchhoff, Dimitra Vergyri. Cross-dialectal data sharing for acoustic modeling in Arabic speech recognition
53 -- 72Natasha Warner, Roel Smits, James M. McQueen, Anne Cutler. Phonological and statistical effects on timing of speech perception: Insights from a database of Dutch diphone perception
73 -- 93Debra M. Hardison. Variability in bimodal spoken language processing by native and nonnative speakers of English: A closer look at effects of speech style
95 -- 112R. van Dinther, R. Veldhuis, Armin Kohlrausch. Perceptual aspects of glottal-pulse parameter variations