Abstract is missing.
- The nature of timing control in languageMorio Kohno, Tomoko Tanioka. 1-4 [doi]
- Stress shift, stress clash, and polysyllabic shortening in a prosodically annotated discourseMary E. Beckman, Maria G. Swora, Jane Rauschenberg, Kenneth De Jong. 5-8 [doi]
- Evidence for a syllable-based model of speech timingW. Nick Campbell. 9-12 [doi]
- The use of relative duration in syntactic disambiguationPatti Price, Colin W. Wightman, Mari Ostendorf, John Bear. 13-16 [doi]
- Statistical analysis for segmental duration rules in Japanese speech synthesisNobuyoshi Kaiki, Kazuya Takeda, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 17-20 [doi]
- Spectro-temporal reduction and expansion in spontaneous speech and read text: the role of focus wordsFlorien J. Koopmans-van Beinum. 21-24 [doi]
- Perception of mora in the three dialects of JapaneseYasuko Nagano-Madsen. 25-28 [doi]
- Performance of nonlinear prediction of speechShihua Wang, Erdal Paksoy, Allen Gersho. 29-32 [doi]
- A method for robust GARMA analysis of speechRen-Hua Wang, Quan fen Guan, Hiroya Fujisaki. 33-36 [doi]
- Generalized cepstral analysis of speech - unified approach to LPC and cepstral methodKeiichi Tokuda, Takao Kobayashi, Satoshi Imai. 37-40 [doi]
- A geometrical argument for imposing an additional constraint on temporal decompositionP. J. Dix, Gerrit Bloothooft, E. J. M. van Mierlo. 41-44 [doi]
- A speech analysis method based on a glottal source modelKeiichi Funaki, Yukio Mitome. 45-48 [doi]
- An improved method for multipulse speech analysisKi Yong Lee, Inhyok Cha, Eckho Song, SouGuil Ann. 49-52 [doi]
- New results on theory of hidden Markov modelsLu Chang, M. M. Bayoumi. 53-56 [doi]
- Laryngeal modeling: translaryngeal pressure for a model with many glottal shapesRonald C. Scherer, Chwen-geng Guo. 57-60 [doi]
- Vocal cord vibration and voice source characteristics - observations by a high-speed digital image recording -Shigeru Kiritani, Hiroshi Imagawa, Hajime Hirose. 61-64 [doi]
- Interpretation of EGG and glottal flow by means of a parametrical glottal geometry modelBert Cranen. 65-68 [doi]
- Voice source dynamics for female speakersInger Karlsson. 69-72 [doi]
- A novel model of pathological vocal cords and its application to the diagnosis of vocal cord polypTakuya Koizumi, Shuji Taniguchi. 73-76 [doi]
- Glottal flow analysis based on a finite element simulation of a two-dimensional unsteady viscous fluidHirohisa Iijima, Nobuhiro Miki, Nobuo Nagai. 77-80 [doi]
- A voice source model for synthesizing speech with various voice quality variationsHideki Kasuya, Yuji Ando, Jinlin Lu, Osamu Komuro. 81-84 [doi]
- Linguistic and paralinguistic variation in the voice sourceAilbhe Ní Chasaide, Christer Gobl. 85-88 [doi]
- Glottal-LPC based coding of telephone band vowels with simple all-pole excitationPaavo Alku. 89-92 [doi]
- Sine wave excited linear predictive coding of speechSuat Yeldener, Ahmet M. Kondoz, Barry G. Evans. 93-96 [doi]
- Improvement on 8 kb/s CELP using learned codebook: LCELPToshiki Miyano, Kazunori Ozawa. 97-100 [doi]
- Optimal scalar quantization of the LSP and the LAR for speech codingSamir Saoudi, Jean-Marc Boucher, Alain Le Guyader. 101-104 [doi]
- 4.8 kbps speech coding using frame synchronous time domain compression (FS-TDC)Shinya Takahashi, Kunio Nakajima. 105-108 [doi]
- Time-domain flexible matrix quantization for very-low-rate speech codingHirohisa Tasaki, Kunio Nakajima. 109-112 [doi]
- Multi-vector pitch-orthogonal LPC: quality speech with low complexity at rates between 4 and 8 kbpsTomohiko Taniguchi, Mark Johnson, Yasuji Ohta. 113-116 [doi]
- Low-delay code-excited linear-predictive coding of wideband speech at 32 kbpsYair Shoham, Erik Ordentlich. 117-120 [doi]
- 11.2 kb/s LCELP speech codec for digital cellular radioYoshihiro Unno, Makio Nakamura, Toshifumi Sato, Toshiki Miyano, Kazunori Ozawa. 121-124 [doi]
- Revised TC-WVQ speech coder for mobile communication systemTomoyuki Ohya, Hirohito Suda, Toshio Miki, Shinji Uebayashi, Takehiro Moriya. 125-128 [doi]
- Extraction of phoneme-dependent individuality using HMM-based segmentation for text-independent speaker recognitionHideki Noda, Masuzo Yanagida. 129-132 [doi]
- Automatically focusing on good discriminating speech segments in speaker recognitionJ. P. Eatock, J. S. D. Mason. 133-136 [doi]
- Text-independent speaker recognition using vocal tract and pitch informationTomoko Matsui, Sadaoki Furui. 137-140 [doi]
- Experiments in automatic talker verification using sub-word unit hidden Markov modelsAaron E. Rosenberg, Chin-Hui Lee, Frank K. Soong, Maureen A. McGee. 141-144 [doi]
- A comparative study of speaker adaptation methods for HMM-based speech recognitionMyoung-Wan Koo, Chong Kwan Un, Hwang Soo Lee, Jun Mo Koo, H. R. Kim. 145-148 [doi]
- Speaker weighted training of HMM using multiple reference speakersHiroaki Hattori, Satoshi Nakamura, Kiyohiro Shikano, Shigeki Sagayama. 149-152 [doi]
- Improved speaker adaptation using multiple reference speakersFrancis Kubala, Richard M. Schwartz. 153-156 [doi]
- Statistical study on voice individuality conversion across different languagesMasanobu Abe, Shigeki Sagayama. 157-160 [doi]
- A minimum distortion spectral mapping applied to voice quality conversionHiroshi Matsumoto, Hirowo Inoue. 161-164 [doi]
- Airflow measurement in a dynamic mechanical model of the vocal foldsAnna M. Barney, Christine H. Shadle, David W. Thomas. 165-168 [doi]
- A study on respiratory and glottal controls in six western singing qualities: airflow and intensity measurement of professional singingJo Estill, Noriko Kobayashi, Kiyoshi Honda, Yuki Kakita. 169-172 [doi]
- A model of dynamic characteristics of the voice source and formant trajectoriesSatoshi Imaizumi, Hiroshi Imagawa, Shigeru Kiritani. 173-176 [doi]
- Pole-zero structure based on two-source vocal tract model, PSE inspection of continuous speech vowel partTakayuki Nakajima, Hiroshi Ohmura. 177-180 [doi]
- Evaluation of speech synthesis using an ARMA estimation and excitation sourcesGang Wang, Nobuhiro Miki, Nobuo Nagai. 181-184 [doi]
- A rule-based speech synthesizer using pitch controlled residual wave excitation methodKazuhiko Iwata, Yukio Mitome, Jun Kametani, Minoru Akamatsu, Seimitsu Tomotake, Kazunori Ozawa, Takao Watanabe. 185-188 [doi]
- Phoneme segment concatenation and excitation control based on spectral distortion criterion for speech synthesisKenzo Itoh, Hideyuki Mizuno, Tetsuya Nomura, Hirokazu Sato. 189-192 [doi]
- Text-to-speech synthesis using a natural voice sourceStephen D. Pearson, Hector R. Javkin, Kenji Matsui, Takahiro Kamai. 193-196 [doi]
- A comparison of egg and a new automatic inverse filtering method in phonation change from breathy to normalPaavo Alku, Erkki Vilkman, Unto K. Laine. 197-200 [doi]
- Enhanced parametric representation using binarized spectrumKi-Chul Kim, Hyunsoo Yoon, Jung Wan Cho. 201-204 [doi]
- Voiced-unvoiced classification using weighted distance measuresKiyoshi Asai, Shigeru Chiba. 205-208 [doi]
- Phoneme recognition using a hierarchical time spectrum patternKei Miki. 209-212 [doi]
- Recognition of plosive using mixed features by fisher s linear discriminantSusumu Sato, Takeshi Fukabayashi. 213-216 [doi]
- Clustering algorithms to minimize recognition error function and their applications to the vowel template learninigAkio Ando, Kazuhiko Ozeki. 217-220 [doi]
- Chinese four tone recognition based on the model for process of generating F0 contours of sentencesChangfu Wang, Hiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose. 221-224 [doi]
- Generalized training of hidden Markov model parameters for speech recognitionNam Soo Kim, Chong Kwan Un. 225-228 [doi]
- Phoneme recognition by combining Bayesian linear discriminations of selected pairs of classesTatsuya Kawahara, Toru Ogawa, Shigeyoshi Kitazawa, Shuji Doshita. 229-232 [doi]
- WAL - a speech recognition programming languageS. Atkins, P. E. Kenne, D. Landy, S. Nulsen, Mary O Kane. 233-236 [doi]
- Automatic segmentation: why and what segments?Mario Rossi. 237-240 [doi]
- A Japanese text dictation system based on phoneme recognition using a modified LVQ2 methodShozo Makino, Akinori Ito, Mitsuru Endo, Ken iti Kido. 241-244 [doi]
- An optimal discriminative training method for continuous mixture density HMMsShinobu Mizuta, Kunio Nakajima. 245-248 [doi]
- Discrimination of words in a large vocabulary speech recognition systemS. Datta, M. Al-Zabibi. 249-252 [doi]
- A recognition time reduction algorithm for large-vocabulary speech recognitionJ. M. Koo, Chong Kwan Un, Hwang Soo Lee, H. R. Kim, Myoung-Wan Koo. 253-256 [doi]
- Speech recognition method based on the dual processing nature of speech perceptionHyung Soon Kim, Chong Kwan Un. 257-260 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation for demi-syllable based speech recognition using continuous HMMKoichi Shinoda, Ken-ichi Iso, Takao Watanabe. 261-264 [doi]
- Speech signal processing on a neurocomputerToby E. Skinner. 265-268 [doi]
- Syllable structure parsing for continuous speech recognitionShigeru Ono. 269-272 [doi]
- An accelerator for high-speed spoken word-spotting and noise immunity learning systemHiroyuki Tsuboi, Hiroshi Kanazawa, Yoichi Takebayashi. 273-276 [doi]
- Recognition of standard malaysian language pronunciationZainul Abidin Md. Sharrif, Masuri Othman, Mohammad Ibrahim A. K. B. Maiden. 277-280 [doi]
- The SAPHA acoustic-phonetic decoder system for standard ArabicM. Djoudi, Jean-Paul Haton. 281-284 [doi]
- A concept for a cocktail-party-processorMarkus Bodden. 285-288 [doi]
- Remote control system using speech-reduction of known noiseTsuyoshi Usagawa, Yuji Morita, Masanao Ebata. 289-292 [doi]
- Lombard speech recognition by formant-frequency-shifted LPC cepstrumYumi Takizawa, Masahiro Hamada. 293-296 [doi]
- A robust distance measure based on group delay difference weighted by power spectraHiroshi Matsumoto, Hirokazu Mitsui. 297-300 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using group delay functionsB. Yegnanarayana, Hema A. Murthy, V. R. Ramachandran. 301-304 [doi]
- Recovery of reverberated speech using multi-microphone sub-band envelope estimationHong Wang, Fumitada Itakura. 305-308 [doi]
- DISPE: a divers speech data-baseAlain Marchal, Marie-Hélène Casanova, P. Gavarry, M. Avon. 309-312 [doi]
- Lexical components in rule-based speech systemsRolf Carlson, Björn Granström, Sheri Hunnicutt. 313-316 [doi]
- The integration of linguistic levels in a text-to-speech conversion systemKen Ceder, Bertil Lyberg. 317-320 [doi]
- The linguistic processing module for Japanese text-to-speech systemTohru Shimizu, Norio Higuchi, Hisashi Kawai, Seiichi Yamamoto. 321-324 [doi]
- A neural network approach to multi-language text-to-speech systemYukiko Yamaguchi, Tatsuro Matsumoto. 325-328 [doi]
- Proposal and evaluation of a new type of terminal analog speech synthesizerHiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose, Yasuharu Asano. 329-332 [doi]
- The interrelationship of intelligibility and naturalness in text-to-speechBathsheba J. Malsheen, Mariscela Amador-Hernandez. 333-336 [doi]
- Segment selection and pitch modification for high quality speech synthesis using waveform segmentsTomohisa Hirokawa, Kazuo Hakoda. 337-340 [doi]
- On the unit search criteria and algorithms for speech synthesis using non-uniform unitsKazuya Takeda, Katsuo Abe, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 341-344 [doi]
- Speech synthesis using superposition of sinusoidal waves generated by synchronized oscillatorsKatsuhiko Shirai, Y. Sato, Kazuo Hashimoto. 345-348 [doi]
- Time-frequency spectral analysis of speechDavid Rainton, S. J. Young. 349-352 [doi]
- Speaker adaptable phoneme recognition selecting reliable acoustic features based on mutual informationKatsuhiko Shirai, Naoki Hosaka, E. Kitagawa, T. Endo. 353-356 [doi]
- Experiments in the use of an automatic learning system for acoustic-phonetic decodingClaude Montacié, Marie-José Caraty, Xavier Rodet. 357-360 [doi]
- Estimation of unknown context using a phoneme environment clustering algorithmShigeki Sagayama, Shigeru Honrna. 361-364 [doi]
- Phonetic triplets in knowledge based approach of acoustic-phonetic decodingYves Laprie, Jean-Paul Haton, Jean-Marie Pierrel. 365-368 [doi]
- Optimisation of English phoneme recognition based on HMMY. Ariki, Andrew M. Sutherland, Mervyn A. Jack. 369-372 [doi]
- A new discriminative training algorithm for hidden Markov modelsHoracio Franco, António Serralheiro. 373-376 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation of continuous parameter HMMYoshimitsu Hirata, Seiichi Nakagawa. 377-380 [doi]
- Auditory spectrograms in HMM phoneme recognitionTatsuya Hirahara, Hitoshi Iwamida. 381-384 [doi]
- Effects of several pausing strategies on the recognizability of words in synthetic speechSieb G. Nooteboom, P. Scharpff, Vincent J. van Heuven. 385-388 [doi]
- The role of temporal structure of speech in word perception and spoken language understandingYoshinori Kitahara, Yoh ichi Tohkura. 389-392 [doi]
- The effects of syntactic and discourse variables on the segmental intelligibility of speechJudith C. Goodman, Howard C. Nusbaum, Lisa Lee, Kevin Broihier. 393-396 [doi]
- Lexical and coarticulatory effects on phoneme monitoring before and after a word identification point in spoken Japanese wordsShigeaki Amano. 397-400 [doi]
- Lexical memory in visual and auditory modalities: the case for a common mental lexiconDavid B. Pisoni, Ellen E. Garber. 401-404 [doi]
- Hypercorrection in speech perceptionJohn J. Ohala, Elizabeth Shriberg. 405-408 [doi]
- The role of learning and attention in speech perceptionHoward C. Nusbaum. 409-412 [doi]
- The joint influence of stimulus information and context in speech perceptionDominic W. Massaro, Michael M. Cohen. 413-416 [doi]
- Influence of context and knowledge on the perception of continuous speechHiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose, Sumio Ohno, Nobuaki Minematsu. 417-420 [doi]
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) film of articulatory movementsArne Kjell Foldvik, O. Husby, Jorn Kvaerness, I. C. Nordli, Peter A. Rinck. 421-424 [doi]
- Modeling of 3-dimensional vocal tract shapes obtained by magnetic resonance imaging for speech synthesisMasafumi Matsumura, Atsushi Sugiura. 425-428 [doi]
- Ultrasonic measurement of tongue motionTokihiko Kaburagi, Masaaki Honda. 429-432 [doi]
- Measurement of sound wave characteristics in the vocal tractKunitoshi Motoki, Nobuhiro Miki, Nobuo Nagai. 433-436 [doi]
- Speech production model involving subglottal structure and oral-nasal coupling through closed velumHisayoshi Suzuki, Takayoshi Nakai, Jianwu Dang, Chengxiang Lu. 437-440 [doi]
- Articulatory characteristics of lip shape during the production of JapaneseYorinobu Sonoda, Keisuke Mori, Tetsuaki Kuriyama. 441-444 [doi]
- Sequential control model of speech articulation in producing word utteranceNaoki Kusakawa, Kiyoshi Honda, Yuki Kakita. 445-448 [doi]
- Sternohyoid muscle activity and pitch control at the onset of utterancesZyun ici B. Simada, Satoshi Horiguchi, Seiji Niimi, Hajime Hirose. 449-452 [doi]
- Prosodic features marking the major syntactic boundary of Japanese: a study on syntactically ambiguous sentences of the kinki dialectJunichi Azuma, Yoshimasa Tsukuma. 453-456 [doi]
- Automatic segmentation and alignment of continuous speech based on temporal decomposition modelH. D. Wang, Gérard Bailly, D. Tuffelli. 457-460 [doi]
- Voiced/unvoiced/silence classification of spoken KoreanHee Il Hahn, Minsoo Hahn. 461-464 [doi]
- Vocal pauses in teaching: statistical analysis and applicationsE. Angderi, M. Barsotti, L. Mazzei, L. Vttrano, R. Volpentesta. 465-468 [doi]
- A pitch detector based on event detection using the dyadic wavelet tranformShubha Kadambe, Gloria Faye Boudreaux-Bartels. 469-472 [doi]
- Proposal and evaluation of a new scheme for reliable pitch extraction of speechHiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose, Shigenobu Seto. 473-476 [doi]
- Spectral interpolation using distortion geodesic linesMasahide Sugiyama. 477-480 [doi]
- Adaptive speech processing using an accelerated stochastic approximation methodHirofumi Yogo, Naoki Inagaki. 481-484 [doi]
- Manifestation of linguistic and para-linguistic information in the voice fundamental frequency contours of spoken JapaneseHiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose, Noboru Takahashi. 485-488 [doi]
- Analysis and synthesis of dialogue prosodyGösta Bruce, Paul Touati. 489-492 [doi]
- Analysis of prosodic features of prominence in spoken Japanese sentencesShoichi Takeda, Akira Ichikawa. 493-496 [doi]
- Acoustic, perceptual, and linguistic analyses of intonation contours in human/machine dialoguesNancy A. Daly, Victor W. Zue. 497-500 [doi]
- The role of the mora in speech production of JapaneseHaruo Kubozono. 501-504 [doi]
- Prosodic features determining the comprehension of syntactically ambiguous sentences in Mandarin ChineseYoshimasa Tsukuma, Junichi Azuma. 505-508 [doi]
- Prosodic transfer in spoken language interpretationDieter Huber. 509-512 [doi]
- On the role of pauses in production and perception of discourseMiyoko Sugito. 513-516 [doi]
- Production and perception of the accent in the consecutively devoiced syllables in tokyo JapaneseKikuo Maekawa. 517-520 [doi]
- Line spectrum pair frequency - based distance measures for speech recognitionFikret S. Gürgen, Shigeki Sagayama, Sadaoki Furui. 521-524 [doi]
- Speaker independent isolated word recognition using local and global structural featuresHiroshi Shimodaira, Yoshio Horiuchi, Masayuki Kimura. 525-528 [doi]
- Speaker independent recognition of isolated Spanish digitsJorge A. Gurlekian, Horacio Franco, Miguel Santagada. 529-532 [doi]
- Speaker independent word recognition system based on the structured transition network of phonetic segmentsNobuo Sugi, Jun ichi Iwasaki, Hiroshi Matsu ura, Tsuneo Nitta, Akira Fukumine, Akira Nakayama. 533-536 [doi]
- Speaker-independent word spotting and a transputer-based implementationAkihiro Imamura, Yoshitake Suzuki. 537-540 [doi]
- An efficient viterbi scoring architecture for HMM-based isolated word recognition systemsJin Yul Kim, Yun-Seok Cho, Soon Young Yoon, Hwang Soo Lee, Chong Kwan Un. 541-544 [doi]
- Word spotting using context-dependent phoneme-based HMMsTatsuo Matsuoka. 545-548 [doi]
- POLYGLOT: multilingual speech recognition and synthesisV. Vittorelli, Gilles Adda, Roberto Billi, Lou Boves, Mervyn A. Jack, E. Vivalda. 549-552 [doi]
- Isolated word recognition using pitch pattern informationSatoshi Takahashi, Shoichi Matsunaga, Shigeki Sagayama. 553-556 [doi]
- Distribution of perceptual cues for Japanese intervocalic stop consonantsMakio Kashino. 557-560 [doi]
- Frication noise and formant-onset frequency as independent cues for the perception of /f/, /s/ and /// in vowel-fricative-vowel stimuliWinfried Datscheweit. 561-564 [doi]
- Effects of different standards on the within-category discrimination of synthesized /ABA/ sequences: comparison between Japanese and SpanishMinoru Tsuzaki, Jorge A. Gurlekian. 565-569 [doi]
- Contextual effect models and psycho acoustic evidence for the modelsMasato Akagi. 569-572 [doi]
- Vowel-contingent anchoring effects on the perception of stop consonantsSumi Shigeno. 573-576 [doi]
- Process and connectionist models of speech perceptionDominic W. Massaro. 577-580 [doi]
- Vowels as phoneme detection targetsAnne Cutler, Dennis Norris, Brit van Ooyen. 581-584 [doi]
- Perception of rhythm: a comparison between americans and JapaneseNoriko Uosaki, Morio Kohno. 585-588 [doi]
- Effects of temporal factors on the speech perception of the hearing impairedAkiko Hayashi, Satoshi Imaizumi, Takehiko Harada, Hideaki Seki, Hiroshi Hosoi. 593-596 [doi]
- Analysis of temporal coordination between articulatory movements and pitch control in the realization of Japanese word accent by a patient with apraxia of speechShinobu Masaki, Itaru F. Tatsumi, Sumiko Sasanuma. 597-600 [doi]
- Multiband dynamic range compression sound processing for hearing impaired patients: effect on intelligibility of speech in background noiseBrian C. J. Moore, Jeannette Seloover Johnson, Vincent Pluvinage, Teresa M. Clark. 601-604 [doi]
- New graphical expression of the high-speed palatographic data in study of the articulatory behaviors of the tongueTakao Mizutani, Kiyoshi Hashimoto, Masahiko Wakumoto, Ken-ich Michi, Hareo Hamada, Tanetoshi Miura. 605-608 [doi]
- Aging in the rate and regularity of maximum syllable repetition under bite-blockMakoto Kariyasu, Kukiko Maruyama. 609-612 [doi]
- Vowel quantity contrast in Korean: production and perceptionMinje Zhi, Yong-Ju Lee. 613-616 [doi]
- Phonetic correlates of stress in mongolianJan-Olof Svantesson. 617-620 [doi]
- Syllable final stops LN east asian languages: southern Chinese, Thai and KoreanRay Iwata, Hajime Hirose, Seiji Niimi, Masayuki Sawashima, Satoshi Horiguchi. 621-624 [doi]
- An electromyographic study on laryngeal adjustment for production of the light tone in Mandarin ChineseSeiji Niimi, Qun Yan, Satoshi Horiguchi, Hajime Hirose. 625-628 [doi]
- A comparison of the articulation of the Chinese /i, l, l/ by Chinese and Japanese speakersJingxu Cui, Shuichi Itahashi. 629-632 [doi]
- The durations of Japanese long vowels and geminated consonants uttered by indonesianHirotake Nakashima, Masao Yamaguchi. 633-636 [doi]
- Constrained-stochastic excitation coding of speech at 4.8 kb/sYair Shoham. 645-648 [doi]
- Adaptive transform coding with an adaptive block size using a modified DCTFumie Hazu, Akihiko Sugiyama, Masahiro Iwadare, Takao Nishitani. 649-652 [doi]
- Medium-delay 8 kbit/s speech coder based on conditional pitch predictionTakehiro Moriya. 653-656 [doi]
- A low rate VQ speech coding algorithm with variable transmission frame lengthSung Ro Lee, Hwang Soo Lee, Chong Kwan Un. 657-660 [doi]
- Speech recognition using demi-syllable neural prediction modelKen-ichi Iso, Takao Watanabe. 661-664 [doi]
- Phonetic features extraction using time-delay neural networksFrédéric Bimbot, Gérard Chollet, Jean-Pierre Tubach. 665-668 [doi]
- Vowel recognition by phoneme filter neural networksMasami Nakamura, Shinichi Tamura. 669-672 [doi]
- A comparison of two methods to transcribe speech into phonemes: a rule-based method vs. back-propagationKari Torkkola, Mikko Kokkonen. 673-676 [doi]
- Phoneme recognition by pairwise discriminant TDNNsJun-ichi Takami, Shigeki Sagayama. 677-680 [doi]
- Speaker independent speech recognition based on neural networks of each category with embedded eigenvectorsYasuyuki Masai, Hiroshi Matsu ura, Tsuneo Nitta. 681-684 [doi]
- Speech recognition using sub-phoneme recognition neural networkKiyoaki Aikawa, Alexander H. Waibel. 685-688 [doi]
- Speech recognition based on the integration of FSVQ and neural networkLi-Qun Xu, Tie-Cheng Yu, G. D. Tattersall. 689-692 [doi]
- Fast text-to-speech learningSamir I. Sayegh. 693-696 [doi]
- Experiments with a speaker-independent continuous speech recognition system on the timit databaseYunxin Zhao, Hisashi Wakita. 697-700 [doi]
- Continuous speech recognition with vowel-context-independent hidden-Markov-models for demisyllablesWalter Weigel. 701-704 [doi]
- Description of acoustic variations by tree-based phone modelingSatoru Hayamizu, Kai-Fu Lee, Hsiao-Wuen Hon. 705-708 [doi]
- A tree-trellis based fast search for finding the n best sentence hypotheses in continuous speech recognitionFrank K. Soong, Eng-Fong Huang. 709-712 [doi]
- Modeling vocabularies for a connected speech recognizerFabio Gabrieli, A. Dimundo, A. Rizzi, G. Colangelit, A. Stagni. 713-716 [doi]
- Japanese phonetic typewriter using HMM phone units and syllable trigramsTakeshi Kawabata, Toshiyuki Hanazawa, Katsunobu Itou, Kiyohiro Shikano. 717-720 [doi]
- A large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system with high prediction capabilityMinoru Shigenaga, Yoshihiro Sekiguchi, Toshihiko Hanagata, Takehiro Yamaguchi, Ryouta Masuda. 721-724 [doi]
- Evaluation of a speech understanding system - suskit-2Yutaka Kobayashi, Yasuhisa Niimi. 725-728 [doi]
- Spoken language system integration and developmentPatti Price, Victor Abrash, Douglas E. Appelt, John Bear, Jared Bernstein, Bridget Bly, John Butzberger, Michael Cohen, Eric Jackson, Robert C. Moore, Douglas B. Moran, Hy Murveit, Mitchel Weintraub. 729-732 [doi]
- Relationship between speech perception and production in language acquisitionPaula Menyuk. 733-736 [doi]
- Relations between thought and language in infancyAndrew N. Meltzoff, Alison Gopnik. 736-740 [doi]
- Towards a new theory of the development of speech perceptionPatricia K. Kuhl. 745-748 [doi]
- Audition and speech perception in the chimpanzeeShozo Kojima. 749-752 [doi]
- Prosodic and phonetic patterning of disyllables produced by Japanese versus French infantsPierre A. Hallé, Benedicte de Boysson-Bardies. 753-756 [doi]
- Perception and production of syllable-initial English /r/ and /l/ by native speakers of JapaneseReiko Akahane-Yamada, Yoh ichi Tohkura. 757-760 [doi]
- The perception of inter-stress-intervals in Japanese speakers of EnglishMichiko Mochizuki-Sudo, Shigeru Kiritani. 761-764 [doi]
- Inductive learning of grapheme-to-phoneme rulesBert Van Coile. 765-768 [doi]
- A support environment based on rule interpreter for synthesis by ruleYoichi Yamashita, Hiroyuki Fujiwara, Yasuo Nomura, Nobuyoshi Kaiki, Riichiro Mizoguchi. 769-772 [doi]
- Speech synthesis using demisyllables for Korean: a preliminary systemJung-Chul Lee, Yong-Ju Lee, Hee-il Han, Eung-Bae Kim, Chang-Joo Kim, Kyung Tae Kim. 773-776 [doi]
- The rules in a Korean text-to-speech systemSeung Kwon Ahn, Koeng-Mo Sung. 777-780 [doi]
- Mandarin speech synthesis by the unit of coarticulatory demi-syllableChi-shi Liu, Wern-Jun Wang, Shiow-Min Yu, Hsiao-Chuan Wang. 781-784 [doi]
- Japanese text-to-speech conversion systemHiroki Kamanaka, Takashi Yazu, Keiichi Chihara, Makoto Morito. 789-792 [doi]
- Neural network based concatenation method of synthesis units for synthesis by ruleYasushi Ishikawa, Kunio Nakajima. 793-796 [doi]
- Improvement of the synthetic speech quality of the formant-type speech synthesizer and its subjective evaluationNorio Higuchi, Hisashi Kawai, Tohru Shimizu, Seiichi Yamamoto. 797-800 [doi]
- A parametric model of speech signals: application to high quality speech synthesis by spectral and prosodic modificationsThierry Galas, Xavier Rodet. 801-804 [doi]
- The improved source model for high-quality synthetic speech soundTomoki Hamagami, Shinichiro Hashimoto. 805-808 [doi]
- A new Japanese text-to-speech synthesizer based on COC synthesis methodKazuo Hakoda, Shin ya Nakajima, Tomohisa Hirokawa, Hideyuki Mizuno. 809-812 [doi]
- A parallel multialgorithmic approach for an accurate and fast English text to speech transcriberG. M. Asher, K. M. Curtis, J. R. Andrews, J. Burniston. 813-816 [doi]
- A highly programmable formant speech synthesiser utilising parallel processorsK. M. Curtis, G. M. Asher, S. E. Pack, J. R. Andrews. 817-820 [doi]
- Enhancement of human-computer interaction through the synthesis of nonverbal expressionsKris Maeda, Yasuki Yamashita, Yoichi Takebayashi. 821-824 [doi]
- Duration, pitch and diphones in the CSTR TTS systemW. Nick Campbell, Stephen D. Isard, Alex I. C. Monaghan, J. Verhoeven. 825-828 [doi]
- A Chinese fundamental frequency synthesizer based on a statistical modelSin-Horng Chen, Su-Min Lee, Saga Chang. 829-832 [doi]
- A contribution to the synthesis of Italian intonationCinzia Avesani. 833-836 [doi]
- Pause rule for Japanese text-to-speech conversion using pause insertion probabilityKazuhiko Iwata, Yukio Mitome, Takao Watanabe. 837-840 [doi]
- Analysis and modeling of tonal features in polysyllabic words and sentences of the standard ChineseHiroya Fujisaki, Keikichi Hirose, Pierre Halle, Haitao Lei. 841-844 [doi]
- Voice response unit embedded in factory automation systemsAkira Yamamura, Hiroharu Kunizawa, Noboru Ueji, Hiroshi Itoyama, Osamu Kakusho. 845-848 [doi]
- Tetos - a text-to-speech system for GermanKlaus Wothke. 849-852 [doi]
- Trial production of a module for speech synthesis by ruleMikio Yamaguchi. 857-860 [doi]
- Integration of speech recognition, text-to-speech synthesis, and talker verification into a hands-free audio/image teleconferencing system (humanet)D. A. Berkley, James L. Flanagan. 861-864 [doi]
- Bellcore efforts in applying speech technology to telephone network servicesG. Velius, Candace A. Kamm, Mary Jo Altom, T. C. Feustel, Marian J. Macchi, Murray F. Spiegel. 865-868 [doi]
- Extension number guidance systemFumihiro Yato, Kazuki Katagisi, Norio Higuchi. 869-872 [doi]
- Japanese text-to-speech equipment: current applications and trendsHirokazu Sato. 873-876 [doi]
- The synthesis of dialectal variation in English and SpanishMariscela Amador-Hernandez, Bathsheba J. Malsheen. 877-880 [doi]
- A Japanese text-to-speech system for electronic mailHiroyoshi Saito, Motoshi Kurihara, Ken-ichiro Kobayashi, Yoshiyuki Hara, Naritoshi Saito. 881-884 [doi]
- Issues concerning voice input applicationsTsuneo Nitta, Nobuo Sugi. 885-888 [doi]
- A prototype for a speech-to-text transcription systemToshiaki Tsuboi, Noboru Sugamura. 889-892 [doi]
- A noise robust speech recognition systemMasahiro Hamada, Yumi Takizawa, Takeshi Norimatsu. 893-896 [doi]
- Computation of probabilities for island-driven parsersA. Corazzat, Renato de Mori, Roberto Gretter, Giorgio Satta. 897-900 [doi]
- A unified probabilistic score function for integrating speech and language information in spoken language processingKeh-Yih Su, Tung-Hui Chiang, Yi-Chung Lin. 901-904 [doi]
- Continuous speech recognition using two-level LR parsingKenji Kita, Toshiyuki Takezawa, Junko Hosaka, Terumasa Ehara, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 905-908 [doi]
- Gap-filling LR parsing for noisy spoken input: towards interactive speech recognitionHiroaki Saito. 909-912 [doi]
- Semantic weights derived from syntax-directed understanding in DTW-based spoken language processingS. Bornerand, Francoise Neel, Gérard Sabah. 913-916 [doi]
- Massively parallel spoken language processing using a parallel associative processor IXM2Hiroaki Kitano, Tetsuya Higuchi, Masaru Tomita. 917-920 [doi]
- Integration of speech recognition and language processing in spoken language translation system (SL-TRANS)Tsuyoshi Morimoto, Kiyohiro Shikano, Hitoshi Iida, Akira Kurematsu. 921-924 [doi]
- Design principle of language model for speech recognitionToshiya Sakano, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 925-928 [doi]
- Sentence speech recognition using semantic dependency analysisShoichi Matsunaga, Shigeki Sagayama. 929-932 [doi]
- An information theoretic approach to the study of phoneme collocational constraintsRob Kassel, Victor W. Zue. 937-940 [doi]
- Real-time effects of some intrasyllabic collocational constraints in EnglishBruce L. Derwing, Terrance M. Nearey. 941-944 [doi]
- Acoustic-phonetic features in the framework of neural-network multi-lingual label alignmentPaul Dalsgaard, William J. Barry. 945-948 [doi]
- Preliminary study of vowel coarticulation in british EnglishJames Hieronymus. 949-952 [doi]
- Effects of context, stress, and speech style on american vowelsCaroline B. Huang. 953-956 [doi]
- Phonetic study and recognition of standard Arabic emphatic consonantsM. Djoudi, H. Aouizerat, Jean-Paul Haton. 957-960 [doi]
- Articulatory and acoustic properties of different allophones of /l/ in american English, catalan and ItalianDaniel Recasens, Edda Farnetani. 961-964 [doi]
- In search of a method to improve the prosodic features of English spoken by JapaneseHiroshi Suzuki, Ghen Ohyama, Shigeru Kiritani. 965-968 [doi]
- A note on loud and lombard speechZinny S. Bond, Thomas J. Moore. 969-972 [doi]
- A weighted intelligibility measure for speech assessmentUte Jekosch. 973-976 [doi]
- Improvements in binaural articulation score by simulated localization using head-related transfer functionsShinji Hayashi. 977-980 [doi]
- Evaluating synthesiser performance: is segmental intelligibility enough?Kim E. A. Silverman, Sara Basson, Suzi Levas. 981-984 [doi]
- Media conversion into language and voice for intelligent communicationFumio Maehara, Masamichi Nakagawa, Kunio Nobori, Toshiyuki Maeda, Tsutomu Mori, Makoto Fujimoto. 985-988 [doi]
- Segmental intelligibility of synthetic and natural speech in real and nonsense wordsRolf Carlson, Björn Granström, Lennart Nord. 989-992 [doi]
- The HKU-USTC speech corpusChorkin Chan, Ren-Hua Wang. 993-996 [doi]
- Automatic alignment of phonemic labels with continuous speechTorbjørn Svendsen, Knut Kvale. 997-1000 [doi]
- TELS: a speech time-expansion labelling systemD. Tuffelli, H. D. Wang. 1001-1004 [doi]
- A speech labeling system based on knowledge processingKazuhiro Arai, Yoichi Yamashita, Tadahiro Kitahashi, Riichiro Mizoguchi. 1005-1008 [doi]
- Development and experimental use of phonwork a new phonetic workbenchHans G. Tillmann, Maximilian Hadersbeck, Hans Georg Piroth, Barbara Eisen. 1009-1012 [doi]
- A speech recognition research environment based on large-scale word and concept dictionariesHiroyuki Chimoto, Hideaki Shinchi, Hideki Hashimoto, Shinya Amano. 1013-1016 [doi]
- Are laboratory databases appropriate for training and testing telephone speech recognizers?Benjamin Chigier, Judith Spitz. 1017-1021 [doi]
- Multilingual speech data base for evaluating quality of digitized speechHiroshi Irii, Kenzo Ito, Nobuhiko Kitawaki. 1025-1028 [doi]
- The optimal gain sequence for fastest learning in connectionist vector quantiser designLizhong Wu, Frank Fallside. 1029-1032 [doi]
- A comparison of preprocessors for the cambridge recurrent error propagation network speech recognition systemTony Robinson, John Holdsworth, Roy Patterson, Frank Fallside. 1033-1036 [doi]
- A recurrent neural network for word identification from phoneme sequencesRobert B. Allen, Candace A. Kamm, S. B. James. 1037-1040 [doi]
- Improved broad phonetic classification and segmentation with a neural network and a new auditory modelLieven Depuydt, Jean-Pierre Martens, Luc Van Immerseel, Nico Weymaere. 1041-1044 [doi]
- Formant extraction model by neural networks and auditory model based on signal processing theoryKazuaki Obara, Hideyuki Takagi. 1045-1048 [doi]
- /b, d, g/ recognition with elliptic discrimination neural unitsNoboru Kanedera, Tetsuo Funada. 1049-1052 [doi]
- A comparative study of acoustic representations of speech for vowel classification using multi-layer perceptronsHelen M. Meng, Victor W. Zue. 1053-1056 [doi]
- Extended elman s recurrent neural network for syllable recognitionYong Duk Cho, Ki-Chul Kim, Hyunsoo Yoon, Seung Ryoul Maeng, Jung Wan Cho. 1057-1060 [doi]
- Detection and classification of phonemes using context-independent error back-propagationHong C. Leung, James R. Glass, Michael S. Phillips, Victor W. Zue. 1061-1064 [doi]
- A new method of consonant detection and classification using neural networksShigeru Chiba, Kiyoshi Asai. 1065-1068 [doi]
- An artificial neural network for the burst point detectionShigeyoshi Kitazawa, Masahiro Serizawa. 1069-1072 [doi]
- The use of discriminant neural networks in the integration of acoustic cues for voicing into a continuous-word recognition systemClaude Lefèbvre, Dariusz A. Zwierzynski. 1073-1076 [doi]
- A neural network for speaker-independent isolated word recognitionKouichi Yamaguchi, Kenji Sakamoto, Toshio Akabane, Yoshiji Fujimoto. 1077-1080 [doi]
- Recent speech database projects in JapanShuichi Itahashi. 1081-1084 [doi]
- Construction of a large Korean speech database and its management system in ETRIJoon-Hyuk Choi, Kyung Tae Kim. 1085-1088 [doi]
- A large-scale Japanese speech databaseYoshinori Sagisaka, Kazuya Takeda, M. Abel, Shigeru Katagiri, T. Umeda, Hisao Kuwabara. 1089-1092 [doi]
- ATR dialogue databaseTerumasa Ehara, Kentaro Ogura, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 1093-1096 [doi]
- Design considerations and text selection for BREF, a large French read-speech corpusJean-Luc Gauvain, Lori Lamel, Maxine Eskenazi. 1097-1100 [doi]
- The ETL speech database for speech analysis and recognition researchKazuyo Tanaka, Satoru Hayamizu, Kozo Ohta. 1101-1104 [doi]
- Collection and analysis of spontaneous and read corpora for spoken language system developmentMichal Soclof, Victor W. Zue. 1105-1108 [doi]
- A distributed speech database with an automatic acquisition system of speech informationShozo Makino, Toshihiko Shirokaze, Ken iti Kido. 1109-1112 [doi]
- Recent developments in speech recognition under adverse conditionsB. H. Juang. 1113-1116 [doi]
- Features for noise-robust speaker-independent word recognitionBrian A. Hanson, Ted H. Applebaum. 1117-1120 [doi]
- Acoustical pre-processing for robust spoken language systemsAlejandro Acero, Richard M. Stern. 1121-1124 [doi]
- Lombard effect compensation for robust automatic speech recognition in noiseJohn H. L. Hansen, Oscar N. Bria. 1125-1128 [doi]
- Speaker-independent word recogniton in noisy environments using dynamic and averaged spectral features based on a two-dimensional mel-cepstrumTadashi Kitamura, Etsuro Hayahara, Yasuhiko Simazciki. 1129-1132 [doi]
- HMM modeling for voice-activated mobile-radio systemL. Fissore, Pietro Laface, M. Codogno, G. Venuti. 1137-1140 [doi]
- A speech recognition method for noise environments using dual inputsYoshio Nakadai, Noboru Sugamura. 1141-1144 [doi]
- Noise robustness in speaker independent speech recognitionShuji Morii, Toshiyuki Morii, Masakatsu Hoshimi, Shoji Hiraoka, Taisuke Watanabe, Katsuyuki Niyada. 1145-1148 [doi]
- Maximum likelihood estimation of speech waveform under nonstationary noise environmentsKaoru Gyoutoku, Hidefumi Kobatake. 1149-1152 [doi]
- Electropalatography in phonetic research and in speech trainingWilliam J. Hardcastle. 1153-1156 [doi]
- Teaching spoken language: a genre-based approachMichael Rost. 1157-1160 [doi]
- English speech training using voice conversionKeiko Nagano, Kazunori Ozawa. 1169-1172 [doi]
- Automatic evaluation and training in English pronunciationJared Bernstein, Michael Cohen, Hy Murveit, Dimitry Rtischev, Mitchel Weintraub. 1185-1188 [doi]
- Vocabulary independent phrase recognition with a linear phonetic context modelYoshiharu Abe, Kunio Nakajima. 1189-1192 [doi]
- Phoneme probability presentation of continuous speechY. Ariki, Mervyn A. Jack. 1193-1196 [doi]
- Duration constraints for the speech input interface in the MULTIWORKS projectHaiyan Ye, Jean Caelen. 1197-1200 [doi]
- Chinese continuous speech recognition system using the state transition models both of phonemes and wordsZhi-ping Hu, Satoshi Imai. 1201-1204 [doi]
- A new training method for multi-phone speech units for use in a hidden Markov model speech recognition systemJade Goldstein, Akio Amano, Hideki Murayama, Mariko Izawa, Akira Ichikawa. 1205-1208 [doi]
- Diction for phoneme/syllable/word-category and identification of language using HMMYoshio Ueda, Seiichi Nakagawa. 1209-1212 [doi]
- Performance evaluation in speech recognition system using transition probability between linguistic unitsTakashi Otsuki, Shozo Makino, Toshio Sone, Ken iti Kido. 1213-1216 [doi]
- Sentence recognition method using word cooccurrence probability and its evaluationIsao Murase, Seiichi Nakagawa. 1217-1220 [doi]
- A knowledge-based understanding system for the Chinese spoken languageYanghai Lu, Beiqian Dai. 1221-1224 [doi]
- Conversational speech understanding based on cooperative problem solvingAkio Komatsu, Eiji Oohira, Akira Ichikawa. 1225-1228 [doi]
- A one-pass search algorithm for continuous speech recognition directed by context-free phrase structure grammarMichio Okada. 1229-1232 [doi]
- A blackboard architecture for a word hypothesizer and a chart parser interaction in an ASR systemAndrea Di Carlo, Rino Falcone. 1233-1236 [doi]
- Heuristic search problems in a natural language task oriented spoken man-machine dialogue systemP. Mousel, Jean-Marie Pierrel, A. Roussanaly. 1237-1240 [doi]
- The making of a speech-to-speech translation system: some findings from the dmdialog projectHiroaki Kitano. 1241-1244 [doi]
- Using high level knowledge sources as a means of recovering DLL-formed Japanese sentences distorted by ambient noiseKyung-ho Loken-Kim, Yasuhiro Nara, Shinta Kimura. 1245-1248 [doi]
- Tools for designing dialogues in speech understanding interfacesAnders Baekgaard, Paul Dalsgaard. 1249-1252 [doi]
- A method for expressing associative relations using fuzzy concepts -aiming at advanced speech recognition-Osamu Takizawa, Masuzo Yanagida. 1253-1256 [doi]
- Bilingual speech interface for a bidirectional machine translation systemJean-Pierre Tubach, Raymond Descout, Pierre Isabelle. 1257-1260 [doi]
- Optimum spectral peak track interpretation in terms of formantsYves Laprie. 1261-1264 [doi]
- Speaker based on multipulse excitation and UPC vocal-tract modelSeiichiro Hangai, Kazuhiro Miyauchi. 1269-1272 [doi]
- A neural network based speaker verification systemI.-Chang Jou, Su-Ling Lee, Min-Tau Lin, Chih-Yuan Tseng, Shih-Shien Yu, Yuh-Juain Tsay. 1273-1276 [doi]
- Speaker recognition using static and dynamic CEPSTRAL feature by a learning neural networkHujun Yin, Tong Zhou. 1277-1280 [doi]
- A national database of spoken language: concept, design, and implementationJ. Bruce Millar, Phillip Dermody, M. Harrington, Julie Vonwiller. 1281-1284 [doi]
- The Italian national database for speech recognitionGiuseppe Castagneri, Kyriaki Vagges. 1285-1288 [doi]
- How useful are speech databases for rule synthesis development and assessment?Louis C. W. Pols. 1289-1292 [doi]
- Eur-accor: a multi-lingual articulatory and acoustic databaseWilliam J. Hardcastle, Alain Marchal. 1293-1296 [doi]
- Conversational turn-taking model using PETRI netNaotoshi Osaka. 1297-1300 [doi]
- Dialog management system mascots in speech understanding systemTetsuya Yamamoto, Yoshikazu Ohta, Yoichi Yamashita, Riichiro Mizoguchi. 1301-1304 [doi]
- Spoken language in interpreted telephone dialoguesSharon L. Oviatt, Philip R. Cohen, Ann Podlozny. 1305-1308 [doi]
- Linguistic knowledge for spoken dialogue processingTsuyoshi Morimoto, Toshiyuki Takezawa. 1309-1312 [doi]
- SPICOS II - a speech understanding dialogue systemHarald Höge. 1313-1316 [doi]
- Recent progress on the MIT VOYAGER spoken language systemVictor W. Zue, James R. Glass, Dave Goddeau, David Goodine, Hong C. Leung, Michael K. McCandless, Michael S. Phillips, Joseph Polifroni, Stephanie Seneff, Dave Whitney. 1317-1320 [doi]
- The source-filter model of speech production applied to early speech developmentFlorien J. Koopmans-van Beinum. 1321-1324 [doi]
- Infants vocalization observed in verbal communication: acoustic analysisYoko Shimura, Satoshi Imaizumi, Kozue Saito, Tamiko Ichijama, Jan Gauffin, Pierre A. Hallé, Itsuro Yamanouchi. 1329-1332 [doi]
- Perception of mora sounds in Japanese by non-native speakers of JapaneseYukie Masuko, Shigeru Kiritani. 1333-1336 [doi]
- Continuous speech recognition on the resource management database using connectionist probability estimationNelson Morgan, Chuck Wooters, Hervé Bourlard, Michael Cohen. 1337-1340 [doi]
- Neural predictive hidden Markov modelEiichi Tsuboka, Yoshihiro Takada, Hisashi Wakita. 1341-1344 [doi]
- On the robustness of HMM and ANN speech recognition algorithmsYasuhiro Minami, Toshiyuki Hanazawa, Hitoshi Iwamida, Erik McDermott, Kiyohiro Shikano, Shigeru Katagiri, Masaona Kagawa. 1345-1348 [doi]
- The TDNN-LR large-vocabulary and continuous speech recognition systemHidefumi Sawai. 1349-1352 [doi]
- Rule-driven neural networks for acoustic-phonetic decodingRémy Bulot, Henri Meloni, Pascal Nocera. 1353-1356 [doi]
- Knowledge-based segmentation and feature maps for speech recognitionFranck Poirier. 1357-1360 [doi]
- Speaker-independent English alphabet recognition: experiments with the e-setMark A. Fanty, Ronald A. Cole. 1361-1364 [doi]
- Neural network based segmentation of continuous speechPinaki Poddar, P. V. S. Rao. 1365-1368 [doi]
- A normalization of coarticulation of connected vowels using neural networkTomio Takara, Motonori Tamaki. 1369-1372 [doi]
- Lip-reading of Japanese vowels using neural networksTomio Watanabe, Masaki Kohda. 1373-1376 [doi]
- Application of the compositional representation to lexical access using neural networksH. Lucke, Frank Fallside. 1377-1380 [doi]
- A voice input-output system using isolated wordsAbdul Mobin, S. S. Agrawal, Anil Kumar, K. D. Pavate. 1381-1384 [doi]
- A psycholinguistic model of first and second language learningTatiana Slama-Cazacu. 1385-1388 [doi]
- The speech code. segmental and prosodic featuresGunnar Fant. 1389-1398 [doi]
- Effects of talker variability on speech perception: implications for current research and theoryDavid B. Pisoni. 1399-1408 [doi]
- Early developments of LPC speech coding techniquesFumitada Itakura. 1409-1410 [doi]