Abstract is missing.
- Generalized frequency domain adaptive filter for acoustic echo cancellerF. Dohnal. [doi]
- Dictation, directories, and data bases; emerging PC applications forlarge vocabulary speech recognitionJanet M. Baker. 3-10 [doi]
- Speech database annotation. the importance of a multi-lingual approachWilliam J. Barry, Paul Dalsgaard. 13-20 [doi]
- Identifying non-linguistic speech featuresLori Lamel, Jean-Luc Gauvain. 23-30 [doi]
- A new generation of spoken dialogue systems: results and lessons from the sundial projectJeremy Peckham. 33-40 [doi]
- Whither a theory of speech pattern processing?Roger K. Moore. 43-47 [doi]
- M-LCELP speech coding at bit-rates below 4kbpsKazunori Ozawa, Masahiro Serizawa, Toshiki Miyano, Toshiyuki Nomura. 51-54 [doi]
- Fast vector quantization using neural maps for CELP at 2400bpsEduardo López Gonzalo, Luis A. Hernández-Gomez. 55-58 [doi]
- Improving the speech quality of CELP-coders by optimizing the long-term delay determinationUlrich Balss, U. Kipper, Herbert Reininger, Dietrich Wolf. 59-62 [doi]
- A stochastic speech coder with multi-band long-term predictionCarmen García-Mateo, José Luis Alba-Castro, Luis A. Hernández Gómez. 63-66 [doi]
- Intelligibility evaluation of 4-5 kbps CELP and MBE vocoders: the hermes program experimentB. W. M. Wery, Herman J. M. Steeneken. 67-70 [doi]
- Recovery of vocal tract midsagittal and area functions from speech signal for vowels and fricative consonantsDenis Beautemps, Pierre Badin, Rafael Laboissière. 73-76 [doi]
- Strange attractors and chaotic dynamics in the production of voiced and voiceless fricativesShrikanth S. Narayanan, Abeer A. Alwan. 77-80 [doi]
- Frequency variations of the lowest main spectral peak in sibilant clustersNoël Nguyen, Philip Hoole. 81-84 [doi]
- Vocalic reduction : prediction of acoustic and articulatory variabilities with invariant motor commandsHélène Loevenbruck, Pascal Perrier. 85-88 [doi]
- Compensating for labial perturbation in a rounded vowel: an acoustic and articulatory studyChristophe Savariaux, Pascal Perrier, Jean Pierre Orliaguet. 89-92 [doi]
- Physiologically-motivated modeling of the voice source in articulatory analysis/synthesisJuergen Schroeter, Bert Cranen. 95-98 [doi]
- Estimation of source parameters by frequency analysisLuís C. Oliveira. 99-102 [doi]
- Fitting a LF-model to inverse filter signalsHelmer Strik, Bert Cranen, Lou Boves. 103-106 [doi]
- Modelling the glottal pulse with a self-excited threshold auto-regressive modelJean Schoentgen. 107-110 [doi]
- Going back to the source: inverse filtering of the speech signal with ANNsJoachim Denzler, Ralf Kompe, Andreas Kießling, Heinrich Niemann, Elmar Nöth. 111-114 [doi]
- Low cost speaker dependent isolated word speech preselection system using static phoneme pattern recognitionManuel A. Leandro, José Manuel Pardo. 117-120 [doi]
- High performance speaker-independent phone recognition using CDHMMLori Lamel, Jean-Luc Gauvain. 121-124 [doi]
- Speaker-independent continuous speech dictationJean-Luc Gauvain, Lori Lamel, Gilles Adda, Martine Adda-Decker. 125-128 [doi]
- Automatic speech recognition without phonemesErnst Günter Schukat-Talamazzini, Heinrich Niemann, Wieland Eckert, Thomas Kuhn, S. Rieck. 129-132 [doi]
- Spoken language identification using ergodic HMM with emphasized state transitionTakashi Seino, Seiichi Nakagawa. 133-136 [doi]
- Neural time warpingBruno Apolloni, Dario Crivelli, Marco Amato. 139-142 [doi]
- Speaker independent small vocabulary speech recognition using MLPs for phonetic labelingPhilippe Le Cerf, Dirk Van Compernolle. 143-146 [doi]
- Multiresolution time-sequency speech processing based on orthogonal wavelet packet pulse formsAndrzej Drygajlo. 147-150 [doi]
- The application of the wavelet transform for speech processingEliathamby Ambikairajah, M. Keane, Liam Kilmartin, Graham Tattersall. 151-154 [doi]
- Integration of acoustic and visual speech for speaker recognitionClaude C. Chibelushi, John S. Mason, R. Deravi. 157-160 [doi]
- Discriminant AR-vector models for free-text speaker verificationClaude Montacié, Jean-Luc Le Floch. 161-164 [doi]
- Within class optimization of cepstra for speaker recognitionJ. Thompson, John S. Mason. 165-168 [doi]
- Text-free speaker recognition using an arithmetic-harmonic sphericity measureFrédéric Bimbot, Luc Mathan. 169-172 [doi]
- Albayzin speech database: design of the phonetic corpusAsunción Moreno, Dolors Poch, Antonio Bonafonte, Eduardo Lleida, Joaquim Llisterri, José B. Mariño, Climent Nadeu. 175-178 [doi]
- A software tool for speech collection, recognition and reproductionCarlos M. Ribeiro, Isabel Trancoso, António Joaquim Serralheiro. 179-182 [doi]
- An object-oriented database for speech processingMatti Karjalainen, Toomas Altosaar. 183-186 [doi]
- Automatic annotation using multi-sensor dataDominic S. F. Chan, Adrian Fourcin. 187-190 [doi]
- Prolog tools for accessing the phondat database of spoken GermanChristoph Draxler, Hans G. Tillmann, Barbara Eisen. 191-194 [doi]
- Cluster-similarity: a useful database for speech processingUte Jekosch. 195-198 [doi]
- SIRVA - a large speech database collected on the Italian telephone networkGiuseppe Castagneri, Giuseppe Di Fabbrizio, A. Massone, Mario Oreglia. 199-201 [doi]
- Objective assessment of speech communication systems; introduction of a software based procedureHerman J. M. Steeneken, Jan A. Verhave, Tammo Houtgast. 203-206 [doi]
- Evaluation of prosody in the French version of multilingual text-to-speech synthesis: neutralising segmental information in preliminary testsPascale Nicolas, Pascal Romeas. 211-214 [doi]
- A clinical voice evaluation systemSokol Saliu, Hideki Kasuya, Yasuo Endo, Yoshinobu Kikuchi. 215-218 [doi]
- A speech therapy workstation for the assessment of segmental quality: voiceless fricativesAlan Wrench, Mary S. Jackson, Mervyn A. Jack, David S. Soutar, A. Gerry Robertson, Janet MacKenzie, John Laver. 219-222 [doi]
- A speech enhancement system using higher order ar estimation in real environmentsJosep M. Salavedra, Enrique Masgrau, Asunción Moreno, Xavier Jove. 223-226 [doi]
- Proposal of a composite measure for the evaluation of noise cancelling methods in speech processingRégine Le Bouquin, Gérard Faucon, A. Akbariazirani. 227-230 [doi]
- The use of linear prediction and spectral scaling for improving speech enhancementP. M. Crozier, Barry M. G. Cheetham, C. Holt, E. Munday. 231-234 [doi]
- Robust speaker-independent speech recognition using non-linear spectral subtraction based IMELDAHelge B. D. Sørensen, Uwe Hartmann. 235-238 [doi]
- Algorithms for the CELP coder with ternary excitationP. Dymarski, Nicolas Moreau. 241-244 [doi]
- Complexity reduction for federal standard 1016 CELP coderM. Mauc, Geneviève Baudoin, M. Jelinek. 245-248 [doi]
- Objective analysis of the GSM half rate speech codec candidatesFriedhelm Wuppermann, Christiane Antweiler, M. Kappelan. 249-252 [doi]
- A 5600 BPS VSELP speech coder candidate for half-rate GSMIra A. Gerson, Mark A. Jasiuk. 253-256 [doi]
- A speech coder for TV programme descriptionAhmet M. Kondoz, Barry G. Evans, M. R. Suddle. 257-260 [doi]
- Pitch synchronous innovation CELP (PSI-CELP)Satoshi Miki, Kazunori Mano, Hitoshi Ohmuro, Takehiro Moriya. 261-264 [doi]
- Intra- and interspeaker variation of /r/ in dutchWillem H. Vieregge, A. P. A. Broeders. 267-270 [doi]
- An acoustic approach to fricatives in Japanese and GermanMechtild Tronnier, Masatake Dantsuji. 271-274 [doi]
- The relationship between spelled and spoken portuguese: implications for speech synthesis and recognitionCéu Viana, Isabel Trancoso, Carlos M. Ribeiro, Amalia Andrade, Ernesto d Andrade. 275-278 [doi]
- Phonetic transcription standards for european names (ONOMASTICA)Mark S. Schmidt, S. Fitt, C. Scott, Mervyn A. Jack. 279-282 [doi]
- Vowel identification as influenced by vowel duration and formant track shapeR. J. J. H. van Son, Louis C. W. Pols. 285-288 [doi]
- Modelling spectral dynamics for vowel classificationWilliam Goldenthal, James R. Glass. 289-292 [doi]
- Perceptive and spectral volumes of synthesized and natural vowelsMilan Stamenkovic, Juraj Bakran, Peter Tancig, Marijan Miletic. 293-296 [doi]
- Labeller - a system for automatic labelling of speech continuous signalRyszard Gubrynowicz, Adam Wrzoskowicz. 297-300 [doi]
- Towards automatic speech-to-text alignmentAke Andersson, Holger Broman. 301-304 [doi]
- Sound duration modelling and time-variable speaking rate in a speech recognition systemNelly Suaudeau, Régine André-Obrecht. 307-310 [doi]
- Using relative duration in large vocabulary speech recognitionM. Jones, Philip C. Woodland. 311-314 [doi]
- Duration of phones as function of utterance length and its use in automatic speech recognitionYifan Gong, William C. Treurniet. 315-318 [doi]
- Duration modelling and multiple codebooks in semi-continuous HMMs for speaker verificationM. E. Forsyth, Mervyn A. Jack. 319-322 [doi]
- Constraining model duration variance in HMM-based connected-speech recognitionMike Hochberg, Harvey F. Silverman. 323-326 [doi]
- Duration modelling with multiple split regressionNaoto Iwahashi, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 329-332 [doi]
- Factors affecting adaptation to time-compressed speechGerry Altmann, Duncan Young. 333-336 [doi]
- Waveform similarity based overlap-add (WSOLA) for time-scale modification of speech: structures and evaluationMarc Roelands, Werner Verhelst. 337-340 [doi]
- A study on the weighting factors of two-dimensional cepstral distance measureHsiao-Chuan Wang, Hsiao-Fen Pai. 341-344 [doi]
- Connection between weighted LPC and higher-order statistics for AR model estimationYves Kamp, Changxue Ma. 345-347 [doi]
- A new frequency shift function for reducing inter-speaker varianceChristine Tuerk, Tony Robinson. 351-354 [doi]
- Speaker normalization using constrained spectra shifts in auditory filter domainYoshio Ono, Hisashi Wakita, Yunxin Zhao. 355-358 [doi]
- Self-learning speaker adaptation based on spectral variation source decompositionYunxin Zhao. 359-362 [doi]
- A dynamic approach to speaker adaptation of hidden Markov networks for speech recognitionTetsuo Kosaka, Edward Willems, Jun-ichi Takami, Shigeki Sagayama. 363-366 [doi]
- Pitch synchronous calculation of acoustic cues using a cochlea modelMarcel de Leeuw, Jean Caelen. 373-376 [doi]
- Nonlinear dynamical systems concepts in speech analysisStephen McLaughlin, Andrew Lowry. 377-380 [doi]
- Grouping of acoustical events using cable neurons and the theory of neuronal group selectionArno J. Klaassen. 381-384 [doi]
- Computationally efficient methods of calculating instantaneous frequency for auditory analysisI. R. Gransden, Steve W. Beet. 385-388 [doi]
- Analysing connected speech with wavelets: some Italian dataFrancesco Cutugno, Pietro Maturi. 389-392 [doi]
- Speech transients analysis using AR-smoothed wigner-ville distributionKrzysztof Marasek. 393-396 [doi]
- Comparison of the variability of formants and formant targets using dynamic modelingMichel Pitermann, Jean Caelen. 397-400 [doi]
- Pitch-synchronous formant extraction by means of a compound auto-regressive modelJean Schoentgen, Zoubir Azami. 401-404 [doi]
- A new air flowmeter design for the investigation of speech productionBernard Teston. 405-408 [doi]
- Articulatory dynamics of lips in Italian / vpv/ and / vbv/ sequencesEmanuela Magno Caldognetto, Kyriaki Vagges, Giancarlo Ferrigno, Claudio Zmarich. 409-412 [doi]
- Restricted distribution of pharyngeal segments: acoustical or mechanical constraints?Ahmed M. Elgendy. 413-416 [doi]
- Vowel normalization by articulatory normalization first attemps for vowel transitionsYohan Payan, Pascal Perrier. 417-420 [doi]
- Synthesis and analysis of vocal source with vibration of larynxNobuhiro Miki, Naohisa Kamiyama, Nobuo Nagai. 421-424 [doi]
- Towards an acoustic-phonetic classification of modern standard arabic vowelsImad Znagui, Sami Boudelaa. 425-427 [doi]
- Divers speech: variable encoding strategiesAlain Marchal, Christine Meunier. 429-432 [doi]
- Phonetic reduction processes in spontaneous speechL. Aguilar, B. Blecua, M. Machuca, R. Mann. 433-436 [doi]
- Spectral characteristics of fricative soundN. R. Ganguli. 437-440 [doi]
- Automatic speaker recognition and analytic processJean-François Bonastre, Henri Meloni. 441-444 [doi]
- Second formant locus-nucleus patterns in French and SwedishDanielle Duez. 445-447 [doi]
- Temporal organisation of segments and sub-segments in consonant clustersChristine Meunier. 449-452 [doi]
- Automatic recognition of arabic stop consonantsAbdelkader Bétari, Rémy Bulot. 453-456 [doi]
- Acoustic-phonetic decoding of Spanish occlusive consonantsM. Inés Torres, P. Iparraguirre. 457-460 [doi]
- Normalized vowel system representation for comparative phonetic studiesPhilip Christov. 461-464 [doi]
- Temporal variation in consonant clusters in SwedishPeter E. Czigler. 469-471 [doi]
- Discriminant analysis of continuous consonantal spectraWiktor Jassem. 473-476 [doi]
- Speech coding for communicationsPeter Noll. 479-488 [doi]
- Modeling and search in continuous speech recognitionHermann Ney. 491-498 [doi]
- Trends in speaking styles researchMaxine Eskenazi. 501-509 [doi]
- Models of speech recognition; personal perspectives on particular approachesJohn S. Bridle. 513-515 [doi]
- Vocoder design based on HOSAsunción Moreno, José A. R. Fonollosa, Josep Vidal. 519-522 [doi]
- Emulation of a formant vocoder at 600 and 800 bpsNigel Sedgwick. 523-526 [doi]
- A pitch synchronized synthesizer for the IMBE vocoderW. Ma, Ahmet M. Kondoz, Barry G. Evans. 527-530 [doi]
- An analysis of the performances of the MBE model when used in the context of a text-to-speech systemThierry Dutoit, Henri Leich. 531-534 [doi]
- High-quality synthesis of LPC speech using multiband excitation modelC. F. Chan. 535-538 [doi]
- Resistance of bilabials /p, b/ to anticipatory labial and mandibular coarticulation from vowel types /i, a, u/Rudolph Sock, Anders Löfqvist. 541-544 [doi]
- Jaw phasings and velocity profiles in arabicMounir Jomaa, Christian Abry. 545-548 [doi]
- Derivation of the transfer function for a speech production model including the nasal cavityMorten Olesen. 549-552 [doi]
- Using artificial neural nets to compare different vocal tract modelsMats Båvegård, Jesper Högberg. 553-556 [doi]
- A time-evolving three-dimensional vocal tract model by means of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)Arne Kjell Foldvik, Ulf Kristiansen, Jorn Kvaerness. 557-558 [doi]
- Training consonants in a computer-aided system for pronunciation teachingEdmund Rooney, Miriam Eckert, Steven M. Hiller, Rebecca Vaughan, John Laver. 561-564 [doi]
- Rhythm analysis of speech and music signalsAndrej Miksic, Bogomir Horvat. 565-568 [doi]
- The contribution of pitch contour, phoneme durations and spectral features to the character of spontaneous and read aloud speechGitta P. M. Laan, Dick R. van Bergem. 569-572 [doi]
- Prosodic differences in reading style: isolated vs. contextualized sentencesJuan M. Garrido, Joaquim Llisterri, Carme de la Mota, Antonio Rios. 573-576 [doi]
- Duration and intonation in emotional speechJean Vroomen, René Collier, Sylvie J. L. Mozziconacci. 577-580 [doi]
- A discriminatively derived linear transform for improved speech recognitionC. M. Ayer, Melvyn J. Hunt, D. M. Brookes. 583-586 [doi]
- Hidden Markov models assuming a continuous-time dynamic emission of acoustic vectorsMarco Saerens. 587-590 [doi]
- Speech modelling using cepstral-time feature matricesSaeed Vaseghi, P. N. Conner, Ben P. Milner. 591-594 [doi]
- A bounded transition hidden Markov model for continuous speech recognitionYoshiharu Abe, Kunio Nakajima. 595-598 [doi]
- Speaker independent phoneme recognition using a heuristic searchAmi Moyal, Arnon Cohen. 599-602 [doi]
- Talker localization and speech enhancement in a noisy environment using a microphone array based acquisition systemMaurizio Omologo, Piergiorgio Svaizer. 605-608 [doi]
- Generalized cepstral modeling of speech degraded by additive noiseTakao Kobayashi, Toshio Kanno, Satoshi Imai. 609-612 [doi]
- Noise quality improvement through SVD equalizationStelios Bakamidis, George Carayannis. 613-616 [doi]
- Speech enhancement by nonlinear spectral estimation - a unifying approachFei Xie, Dirk Van Compernolle. 617-620 [doi]
- Subband array processing for speech enhancementKristian Kroschel, Keld Lange. 621-624 [doi]
- The design and recording of icy, a corpus for the study of intraspeaker variability and the characterisation of speaking stylesVincent Pean, Sheila M. Williams, Maxine Eskenazi. 627-630 [doi]
- Speaker clustering for improved speech recognitionAndrej Ljolje. 631-634 [doi]
- Speaker-variability in spectral bands of dutch vowel segmentsHenk van den Heuvel, Bert Cranen, A. C. M. Rietveld. 635-638 [doi]
- A method of classification among Japanese dialectsShuichi Itahashi, Kimihito Tanaka. 639-642 [doi]
- Measuring similarities among speakers by means of neural networksJ. Antonio Hernandez-Méndez, Aníbal R. Figueiras-Vidal. 643-646 [doi]
- Robust endpoint detection of speech in the presence of noiseMaria Rangoussi, Stylianos Bakamidis, George Carayannis. 649-652 [doi]
- Automatic segmentation and labeling of English and Italian speech databasesBianca Angelini, Fabio Brugnara, Daniele Falavigna, Diego Giuliani, Roberto Gretter, Maurizio Omologo. 653-656 [doi]
- A segmental approach versus a centisecond one for automatic phonetic time-alignmentAzarshid Farhat, Guy Perennou, Régine André-Obrecht. 657-660 [doi]
- A segmentation algorithm based on acoustical features using a self organizing neural networkI. Heroaez, J. Barandiaran, Enrique Monte, Borja Etxebarria. 661-663 [doi]
- SLAM: segmentation and labelling automatic modulePiero Cosi. 665-668 [doi]
- Phone and syllable segmentation by concurrent window modulesChristian Heise, Hans-Heinrich Bothe. 669-672 [doi]
- Reliability of speech segmentation and labelling at different levels of transcriptionBarbara Eisen. 673-676 [doi]
- On the perception of acoustic and lexical vowel reductionDick R. van Bergem. 677-680 [doi]
- Click detection in Italian and EnglishBrit van Ooyen, Anne Cutler, Pier Marco Bertinetto. 681-684 [doi]
- Phonological variation and mismatch in lexical accessAndrew R. Nix, M. Gareth Gaskell, William D. Marslen-Wilson. 685-688 [doi]
- Perception of word boundaries by dutch listenersMonique van Zon, Béatrice de Gelder. 689-692 [doi]
- Perception of French stop bursts, implications for stop identificationAnne Bonneau, Linda Djezzar, Yves Laprie. 693-696 [doi]
- Using isofrequency neural column for harmonic sound scene decompositionZdravko Kacic, Bogomir Horvat. 697-700 [doi]
- Do ear perceive vowel through formants?A. K. Datta. 701-704 [doi]
- Speech recognition using auditory models and neural networksTrupti Vyas, Michael J. Pont, Seyed J. Mashari. 705-708 [doi]
- The influence of temporal processes on spectral masking patterns of harmonic complex tones and vowelsChangxue Ma, Armin Kohlrausch. 709-712 [doi]
- Temporal effect on the perception of continuous speech and a possible mechanism in the human auditory systemHisao Kuwabara. 713-716 [doi]
- Comparison of various adaptation mechanisms in an auditory model for the purpose of speech processingEdward Jones, Eliathamby Ambikairajah. 717-720 [doi]
- Sensory-motor manifestations of speech-hearing interactionI. A. Vartanian, Tatiana V. Chernigovskaya. 721-723 [doi]
- Syllable perception: lateralization of native and foreign languagesTatiana V. Chernigovskaya, I. A. Vartanian, T. I. Tokareva. 725-726 [doi]
- Simulation of short-latency auditory evoked potentials: a pilot studyMichael J. Pont. 727-730 [doi]
- Intermediate representations in spoken word recognition: a cross-linguistic study of word illusionsRégine Kolinsky, José Morais. 731-734 [doi]
- Time - varing manner on formant trajectories of Chinese diphthongsJianfen Cao. 735-738 [doi]
- High-quality speech coding at 2.4 kbps based on time-frequency interpolationYair Shoham. 741-744 [doi]
- Coding of speech signal by fractal techniquesLuca Marcato, Enzo Mumolo. 745-748 [doi]
- A new reference signal for evaluating the quality of speech coded at low bit ratesNaomi Asanuma, Hiromi Nagabuchi. 749-752 [doi]
- A psychophysical study of fourier phase and amplitude coding of speechChangxue Ma, Douglas D. O Shaughnessy. 753-756 [doi]
- Data-driven identification of poly- and mono-phonemes for four european languagesOve Andersen, Paul Dalsgaard, William J. Barry. 759-762 [doi]
- Reversible letter-to-sound sound-to-letter generation based on parsing word morphologySheri Hunnicutt, Helen M. Meng, Stephanie Seneff, Victor W. Zue. 763-766 [doi]
- The role of context in the automatic recognition of stressed syllablesJan Moore, Peter Roach. 767-770 [doi]
- Metrical structure and the perception of time-compressed speechDuncan Young, Gerry Altmann, Anne Cutler, Dennis Norris. 771-774 [doi]
- Are stress and phonemic string processed separately? evidence from speech illusionsValerie Pasdeloup, José Morais, Régine Kolinsky. 775-778 [doi]
- On the automatic classification of pitch movementsLouis ten Bosch. 781-784 [doi]
- Modelling of intonation contours at the sentence level using CHMMs and the 1961 o connor and arnold schemeU. Jensen, Roger K. Moore, Paul Dalsgaard, Børge Lindberg. 785-788 [doi]
- 0 contours using the rise/fall/connection modelPaul Taylor. 789-792 [doi]
- A pitch contour analysis guided by prosodic event detectionEdouard Geoffrois. 793-796 [doi]
- Analysis and synthesis of pitch movements in a read polish textGrazyna Demenko, Ignacy Nowak, Janusz Imiolczyk. 797-800 [doi]
- Optimization of an HMM - based continuous speech recognizerFritz Class, Alfred Kaltenmeier, Peter Regel-Brietzmann. 803-806 [doi]
- Linear and nonlinear prediction for speech recognition with hidden Markov modelsMarco Saerens, Hervé Bourlard. 807-810 [doi]
- Segmental post-processing of the n-best solutions in a speech recognition systemM. N. Lokbani, Denis Jouvet, Jean Monné. 811-814 [doi]
- A study of on-line Bayesian adaptation for HMM-based speech recognitionTatsuo Matsuoka, Chin-Hui Lee. 815-818 [doi]
- Hidden Markov models using shared vector linear predictorsB. A. Maxwell, Philip C. Woodland. 819-822 [doi]
- Noise adaptation: speech recognition by auditory models and human listenersWilliam A. Ainsworth, Georg F. Meyer. 825-828 [doi]
- Adapting a HMM-based recogniser for noisy speech enhanced by spectral subtractionJ. A. Nolazco Flores, Steve J. Young. 829-832 [doi]
- Speech recognition under the unstationary noise based on the noise Markov model and spectral-subtractionTetsunori Kobayashi, Ryuji Mine, Katsuhiko Shirai. 833-836 [doi]
- HMM recognition in noise using parallel model combinationM. J. F. Gales, Steve J. Young. 837-840 [doi]
- Selectively trained neural networks for connected word recognition in noisy environmentsLaurent Buniet, Dominique Fohr, Yolande Anglade, Jean-Claude Junqua, Jean-Marie Pierrel. 841-844 [doi]
- A baseline of a speaker independent continuous speech recognizer of ItalianBianca Angelini, Fabio Brugnara, Daniele Falavigna, Diego Giuliani, Roberto Gretter, Maurizio Omologo. 847-850 [doi]
- Word lookahead scheme for cross-word right context models in a stack decoderLalit R. Bahl, Peter V. de Souza, P. S. Gopalakrishnan, David Nahamoo, Michael Picheny. 851-854 [doi]
- Recognition of obstruent phonemes in speaker-independent fluent speech using a hierarchical approachDavid B. Grayden, Michael S. Scordilis. 855-858 [doi]
- A continuous speech recognition system using phonotactic constraintsBernd Plannerer, Günther Ruske. 859-862 [doi]
- Joint arabic-hebrew speech synthesis systemM. Ouadou, A. Rajouani, M. Zyoute, J. Rosenfeld, M. Najim. 865-868 [doi]
- Improvements of the Spanish version of the multivox text-to-speech systemEduardo López Gonzalo, Gábor Olaszy, Géza Németh. 869-872 [doi]
- Generating intonation for Swedish text-to-speech conversion using a quantitative model for the ::::F::::::0:: contourMats Ljungqvist, Hiroya Fujisaki. 873-876 [doi]
- PHRITTS - a text-to-speech synthesizer for the German languagePeter Meyer, Hans-Wilhelm Rühl, R. Krüger, M. Kugler, L. Vogten, A. Dirksen, Karim Belhoula. 877-880 [doi]
- Rule-based grapheme-to-phoneme conversion of namesKarim Belhoula. 881-884 [doi]
- A prototype text-to-speech system for scottish gaelicIain R. Murray, Morag M. Black. 885-887 [doi]
- A text-to-speech system for polishJanusz Imiolczyk, Ignacy Nowak, Grazyna Demenko. 889-892 [doi]
- Intelligibility as a function of speech coding method for template-based speech synthesisMarian J. Macchi, Mary Jo Altom, Dan Kahn, Sharad Singhal, Murray F. Spiegel. 893-896 [doi]
- Evaluating synthesised prosody in simulations of an automated telephone enquiry serviceJill House, Catriona MacDermid, Scott McGlashan, Andrew Simpson, Nick J. Youd. 901-904 [doi]
- Speech synthesis in dialogue systemsKatherine Morton, Marcel Tatham. 905-908 [doi]
- Applying analysis of human emotional speech to enhance synthetic speechElissaveta Abadjieva, Iain R. Murray, John L. Arnott. 909-912 [doi]
- A generic front end for text-to-speech synthesis systemsEric Lewis, Marcel Tatham. 913-916 [doi]
- Experiments with silent-e and affix correspondences in stochastic phonographic transductionRobert W. P. Luk, Robert I. Damper. 917-920 [doi]
- Phoneme-dependent speech synthesis in the time and frequency domainsGeorg Fries. 921-924 [doi]
- Speech synthesis experiments with the glove synthesiserInger Karlsson, Lennart Neovius. 925-928 [doi]
- Auditory detection of discontinuities in synthesis-by-concatenationVolker Kraft. 929-932 [doi]
- Effects of the phase jitters on naturalness of synthesized speechYun-Keun Lee, Seung Kwon Ahn. 933-936 [doi]
- Letter-to-sound rules for the welsh languageBriony Williams. 937-940 [doi]
- Dialogue design principles - key for usability of voice processingChristel Müller, Fred Runge. 943-946 [doi]
- Wizard-of-oz and the trade-off between naturalness and recogniser constraintsHans Dybkjær, Niels Ole Bernsen, Laila Dybkjær. 947-950 [doi]
- Dialogue analysis and generation: a theory for modelling natural English dialogueCerian Jones, Roberto Garigliano. 951-954 [doi]
- Features of naive callers dialogues with a simulated speech understanding and dialogue systemCatriona MacDermid. 955-958 [doi]
- Refering to actions in man-machine command dialoguesFabrice Duermael, Bertrand Gaiffe. 959-962 [doi]
- Issues in large scale statistical language modelingR. Zhao, Patrick Kenny, P. Labute, Douglas D. O Shaughnessy. 965-968 [doi]
- A data-driven case for a spontaneous speech grammarRoberto Garigliano, Kevin Johnson, Russell J. Collingham. 969-972 [doi]
- Improved clustering techniques for class-based statistical language modellingReinhard Kneser, Hermann Ney. 973-976 [doi]
- A consolidated language model for speech recognitionJeremy H. Wright, Gareth J. F. Jones, Harvey Lloyd-Thomas. 977-980 [doi]
- Empirical acquisition of word and phrase classes in the atis domainMichael K. McCandless, James R. Glass. 981-984 [doi]
- New frequency domain prosodic modification techniquesEduardo Rodríguez Banga, Carmen García-Mateo. 987-990 [doi]
- A prosody modification approach for auditory user feedback in the spell pronunciation teaching systemH. D. Wang, D. Degryse, Fabrizio Carrara. 991-994 [doi]
- A speech prosody conversion system with a high quality speech analysis-synthesis methodTohru Takagi, Eiichi Miyasaka. 995-998 [doi]
- On the perceived serial position of discourse unitsMarc Swerts, René Collier. 999-1002 [doi]
- Enhanced pitch tracking and the processing of ::::F::::::0:: contours for computer aided intonation teachingPaul C. Bagshaw, Steven M. Hiller, Mervyn A. Jack. 1003-1006 [doi]
- Improved DVQ algorithm for speech recognition: a new adaptive learning rule with neurons annihilationChakib Tadj, Franck Poirier. 1009-1012 [doi]
- Speaker-independent 212 word recognition using combNET-IITaro Sasaki, Tadashi Kitamura, Akira Iwata. 1013-1016 [doi]
- Learning direct acoustic-to-semantic mappings through simple recurrent networksM. Asunción Castaño, Enrique Vidal, Francisco Casacuberta. 1017-1020 [doi]
- Noise-adaptive hidden Markov models based on wiener filtersSaeed Vaseghi, Ben P. Milner. 1023-1026 [doi]
- Noisy speech recognition using singular value decomposition and two-sided linear predictionK. F. Wong, S. H. Leung, H. C. Ng. 1027-1030 [doi]
- Recognition of noisy speech by composition of hidden Markov modelsFranck Martin, Kiyohiro Shikano, Yasuhiro Minami. 1031-1034 [doi]
- Noise reduction and speech recognition in noise conditions tested on LPNN-based continuous speech recognition systemYuqing Gao, Jean-Paul Haton. 1035-1038 [doi]
- Combination of distortion-robust feature extraction and neural noise reduction for ASRMichael Trompf, Ralf Richter, Harald Eckhardt, Heidi Hackbarth. 1039-1042 [doi]
- Robust word spotting in adverse car environmentsSatoshi Nakamura, Toshio Akabane, Seiji Hamaguchi. 1045-1048 [doi]
- Definition of subword acoustic units for wordspottingRichard C. Rose. 1049-1052 [doi]
- Spontaneous speech recognition by sentence spottingJiro Kiyama, Yoshiaki Itoh, Ryuichi Oka. 1053-1056 [doi]
- Phonetic-based word spotter: various configurations and application to event spottingPhilippe Jeanrenaud, Kenney Ng, Man-Hung Siu, Jan Robin Rohlicek, Herbert Gish. 1057-1060 [doi]
- An application of word-spotting in a voice activated service entry systemAkihiro Imamura, Mikio Kitai. 1061-1064 [doi]
- Estimation of speech signal classification features in a simulated hyperbaric environmentJoel Crestel, Michel Guitton. 1069-1072 [doi]
- Noise suppression system for a carPetr Pollák, Pavel Sovka, Jan Uhlír. 1073-1076 [doi]
- Adaptive gain control and echo cancellation for hands-free telephone systemsPeter Heitkämper, Michael Walker II. 1077-1080 [doi]
- Predicting segmental durations for accommodation within a syllable-level timing frameworkW. Nick Campbell. 1081-1084 [doi]
- A filtersank based on physiologically measured characteristics in an auditory model for speech signal processingTore Fjällbrant, Fisseha Mekuria, Shahrokh Amirijoo. 1085-1088 [doi]
- Spectral sensitivity weighted transform coding for LSP parametersFu-Rong Jean, Chih-Chung Kuo, Hsiao-Chuan Wang. 1089-1092 [doi]
- An efficient algorithm to estimate the instantaneous SNR of speech signalsRainer Martin. 1093-1096 [doi]
- Speech/non-speech detection for voice response systemsLaurent Mauuary, Jean Monné. 1097-1100 [doi]
- Time-spectral approach to compiling speech reconstructionAlexander Osipov, Vladimir Zentsov. 1101-1104 [doi]
- A voice activity detector based on cepstral analysisJ. A. Haigh, John S. Mason. 1105-1106 [doi]
- High quality coding of wideband speech at 24 kbit/sJrgen Paulus, Christiane Antweiler, Christian G. Gerlach. 1107-1110 [doi]
- A 32 kbit/s wideband speech coder based on transform codingH. Dia, Gang Feng, Y. Mahieux. 1111-1114 [doi]
- Realtime implementation of high-quality 32 kbps wideband LD-CELP coderOded Gottesman, Yair Shoham. 1115-1118 [doi]
- A fixed-point implementation of the 16 kb/s LD-CELP speech coding algorithmA. Popescu, D. Vicard, François Bill Druilhe. 1119-1122 [doi]
- Optimality of sequential quantization in analysis-by-synthesis speech codecsChristian G. Gerlach. 1123-1126 [doi]
- A sub-band MPLPC coder for high quality speech coding at 16 kbit/sRadwan Kastantin, Gang Feng. 1127-1130 [doi]
- Optimal multepulse excitation determination by simulated annealingEnzo Mumolo, Alessio Rebelli. 1131-1134 [doi]
- Split vector quantization of the LPC parameters using weighted lattice structureK. W. Law, C. F. Chan. 1135-1138 [doi]
- A new approach to noiseless interframe coding of LPC parameters in vector quantizer applicationsStefan Bruhn. 1139-1142 [doi]
- Efficient quantization of speech spectral informationTorbjørn Svendsen. 1143-1146 [doi]
- Enhancing robustness of coded LPC-spectra to channel errors by use of residual redundancyStefan Feldes. 1147-1150 [doi]
- Multi-rate source and channel coding for mobile communication systemsS. A. Atungsiri, Ahmet M. Kondoz, Barry G. Evans. 1151-1154 [doi]
- Training method of the excitation codebook for CELPTakehiro Moriya, Satoshi Miki, Kazunori Mano, Hitoshi Ohmuro. 1155-1158 [doi]
- Next utterance prediction based on two kinds of dialog modelsYoichi Yamashita, Riichiro Mizoguchi. 1161-1164 [doi]
- The design of a real world wizard of oz experiment for a speech driven telephone directory information systemT. Andemach, G. Deville, Luc Mortier. 1165-1168 [doi]
- Dialog structure and plan recognition in spontaneous spoken dialogSheryl R. Young. 1169-1172 [doi]
- A speech-first model for repair identification in spoken language systemsJulia Hirschberg, Christine H. Nakatani. 1173-1176 [doi]
- Recognition confidence measures for spontaneous spoken dialogSheryl R. Young, Wayne H. Ward. 1177-1179 [doi]
- The effects of parameter smoothing on robust learning in syntactic ambiguity resolutionTung-Hui Chiang, Keh-Yih Su. 1183-1186 [doi]
- Learning associations between grammars: a new approach to natural language understandingEnrique Vidal, Roberto Pieraccini, Esther Levin. 1187-1190 [doi]
- Language modelling for CSR of large corpus using automatic classification of wordsMichèle Jardino, Gilles Adda. 1191-1194 [doi]
- Inference of stochastic context-free grammar rules from example data using the theory of Bayesian belief propagationHelmut Lucke. 1195-1198 [doi]
- Constructing linguistic oriented language models for large vocabulary speech recognitionPetra Witschel. 1199-1202 [doi]
- Phrasing strategies in prosodic parsing and speech synthesisGösta Bruce, Björn Granström, Kjell Gustafson, David House. 1205-1208 [doi]
- Prosody in the perception of syntactic boundariesEva Strangert, Bo Strangert. 1209-1210 [doi]
- Prosodic cues to the perception of constituent boundariesJan-Roelof de Pijper, Angelien Sanderman. 1210-1214 [doi]
- Acoustic cues to syntactic structure - evidence from prosodic and segmental effectsEsther Grabe, Tara Hoist, Francis Nolan, Paul Warren. 1215-1218 [doi]
- Automatic generation of French intonation based on a perceptual study and morpho-syntactic informationFrédéric Beaugendre, Anne Lacheret-Dujour. 1219-1222 [doi]
- A partitioned neural network approach for vowel classification using smoothed time/frequency featuresStephen A. Zahorian, Zaki B. Nossair, Claude A. Norton III. 1225-1228 [doi]
- Speaker-independent 100 word recognition using dynamic spectral features of speech and a neural networkTadashi Kitamura. 1229-1232 [doi]
- Speaker independent isolated word recognition using vector quantization and neural networksMing Zhu, Klaus Fellbaum. 1233-1236 [doi]
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- On-line adaptation of a speech recognizer to variations in telephone line conditionsChafic Mokbel, Jean Monné, Denis Jouvet. 1247-1250 [doi]
- Online channel compensation for robust speech recognitionMatthias Wittmann, Otto Schmidbauer, Abdulmesih Aktas. 1251-1254 [doi]
- Evaluation of car noise reduction/compensation techniques for digit recognition in a speaker-independent contextPatrice Alexandre, Jérôme Boudy, Philip Lockwood. 1255-1258 [doi]
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- Word spotting in conversational speech based on phonemic unit likelihood by mutual information criterionShigeki Okawa, Tetsunori Kobayashi, Katsuhiko Shirai. 1281-1284 [doi]
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- Automatic language identification using a segment-based approachTimothy J. Hazen, Victor W. Zue. 1303-1306 [doi]
- A comparison of approaches to automatic language identification using telephone speechYeshwant K. Muthusamy, Kay M. Berkling, Takayuki Arai, Ronald A. Cole, Etienne Barnard. 1307-1310 [doi]
- Integration of neural networks and robust parsers in natural language understandingYing Cheng, Yves Normandin, Paul Fortier. 1311-1314 [doi]
- Joint speech and gesture analysis some experimental results on multimodal interfacePierre Dauchy, Christophe Mignot, Claude Valot. 1315-1318 [doi]
- Generation of speech reply in the speech response systemKeikichi Hirose, Yasuharu Asano. 1319-1322 [doi]
- A fast multilingual probabilistic taggerEvangelos Dermatas, George Kokkinakis. 1323-1326 [doi]
- The possibility for acquisition of statistical network grammar using ergodic HMMJin ichi Murakami, Hiroki Yamatomo, Shigeki Sagayama. 1327-1330 [doi]
- A robust analyzer for spoken language understandingEvelyne Millien, Roland Kuhn. 1331-1334 [doi]
- Identifying usability attributes of automated telephone servicesR. T. Dutton, John C. Foster, Mervyn A. Jack, F. W. M. Stentiford. 1335-1338 [doi]
- Utilising prosody to perform syntactic disambiguationAndrew Hunt. 1339-1342 [doi]
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- Training vowel pronunciation using a computer-aided teaching systemEdmund Rooney, Rebecca Vaughan, Steven M. Hiller, Fabrizio Carraro, John Laver. 1347-1350 [doi]
- Methods for traversing a pre-recorded speech message network to optimise dialogue in telephone answering systemsMary Zajicek, Ken Brownsey. 1351-1354 [doi]
- Deaccentuation and persistence of grammatical function and surface positionJulia Hirschberg, Jacques M. B. Terken. 1359-1362 [doi]
- Romaine: a lattice based approach to lexical accessDavid Goodine, Victor W. Zue. 1367-1370 [doi]
- A system for clustering spoken documentsToffee A. Albina, Erica G. Bernstein, David M. Goblirsch, Douglas E. Lake. 1371-1374 [doi]
- The conversational computer: an apple perspectiveKai-Fu Lee. 1377-1384 [doi]
- Speech quality assessment and evaluationUte Jekosch. 1387-1394 [doi]
- Timing in text-to-speech systemsJan P. H. van Santen. 1397-1404 [doi]
- Learning how to understand languageRoberto Pieraccini, Esther Levin, Enrique Vidal. 1407-1412 [doi]
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- The cost of errors in a spoken language systemLynette Hirschman, Christine Pao. 1419-1422 [doi]
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- Error correction and ambiguity resolution in multimodal man-machine dialoguePhilippe Morin, Jean-Claude Junqua. 1431-1434 [doi]
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- Automatic segmentation of speech for TTSAndrej Ljolje, Michael D. Riley. 1445-1448 [doi]
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- Phonetic features for spelled letter recognition with a time delay neural networkChristoph Windheuser, Frédéric Bimbot. 1489-1492 [doi]
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- Perceptual effects of place and voicing assimilation in dutch consonantsVincent J. van Heuven, Willy Jongenburger. 1503-1506 [doi]
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- Multiple codebook Spanish phone recognition using semicontinuous hidden Markov modelsM. Inés Torres, Francisco Casacuberta. 1543-1546 [doi]
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- Evaluation of VQ-distortion based HMMSeiichi Nakagawa, Hideyuki Suzuki, Li Zhao. 1559-1562 [doi]
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- Comparison of geometric, connections and structural techniques on a difficult isolated word recognition taskMaria J. Castro, Juan C. Perez. 1599-1602 [doi]
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- Two schemes of phonetic feature extraction using artificial neural networksShuping Ran, J. Bruce Millar. 1607-1610 [doi]
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- Multiple multilabeling to improve HMM-based speech recognition in noiseJavier Hernando, José B. Mariño, Climent Nadeu. 1643-1646 [doi]
- Managing spoken dialogues for information servicesWieland Eckert, Scott McGlashan. 1653-1656 [doi]
- Ambiguity and uncertainty in spoken dialoguePaul Heisterkamp. 1657-1660 [doi]
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- Speaking with computers: a multimodal approachPierre Lefebvre, G. Duncan, Frank Poirier. 1665-1668 [doi]
- Habitable interaction in goal-oriented multimodal dialogue systemsPhilippe Morin, Jean-Claude Junqua. 1669-1672 [doi]
- Test of voice quality on ATM based equipmentJorn Stern Nielsen, Bo Baungaard. 1675-1678 [doi]
- An evaluation system for ascertaining the quality of synthetic speech based on subjective category rating testsHarald Klaus, H. Klix, Jochem Sotscheck, Klaus Fellbaum. 1679-1682 [doi]
- Comprehension of KTH text-to-speech with listening speed paradigmLennart Neovius, Parimala Raghavendra. 1687-1690 [doi]
- Theoretical principles concerning segmentation, labelling strategies and levels of categorical annotation for spoken language database systemsHans G. Tillmann, Bernd Pompino-Marschall. 1691-1694 [doi]
- A speech formant synthesizer based on harmonic + random formant-waveforms representationsSophie Grau, Christophe d Alessandro, Gaël Richard. 1697-1700 [doi]
- SPEAKEZ: a first experiment in concatenation synthesis from a large corpusAlexander G. Hauptmann. 1701-1704 [doi]
- Designing control rules for a serial pole-zero vocal tract modelJoop Kerkhoff, Lou Boves. 1705-1708 [doi]
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- Real-time, neural network-based, French alphabet recognition with telephone speechP. Schmid, Ronald A. Cole, Mark A. Fanty, Hervé Bourlard, M. Haessen. 1723-1726 [doi]
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- Depth measurement of face and palate by structured lightChristine H. Shadle, J. N. Carter, T. P. Monks, John Field. 1745-1748 [doi]
- Visiolab: a multimedia environment for the study of bimodal speech perceptionLouis-Jean Boë, Sonia Kandel, Annie Chappelet, Tahar Lallouache. 1749-1752 [doi]
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- Iterative transformation and alignment for speech labelingYifan Gong, Jean-Paul Haton. 1759-1762 [doi]
- Controlling search in segmentation lattices of speech signalsKai Hübener, Andreas Hauenstein. 1763-1766 [doi]
- Accent phrase segmentation using transition probabilities between pitch pattern templatesHiroshi Shimodaira, Mitsuru Nakai. 1767-1770 [doi]
- Syllable segmentation of continuous speech with artificial neural networksWolfgang Reichl, Günther Ruske. 1771-1774 [doi]
- Labelling of speech given its text representationMats Blomberg, Rolf Carlson. 1775-1778 [doi]
- Speech recognition over packetized voice systemsBo Baungaard, Jorn Stern Nielsen. 1781-1784 [doi]
- A French oral dialogue system for flight reservations over the telephoneJean-Yves Magadur, Frédéric Gavignet, François Andry, Francis Charpentier. 1789-1792 [doi]
- A voice-activated extension telephone exchange systemShingo Kuroiwa, Kazuya Takeda, Naomi Inoue, Izuru Nogaito, Seiichi Yamamoto, Makoto Shozakai, Kunihiko Owa, Masahiko Takahashi, Ryuuji Matsumoto. 1793-1796 [doi]
- The VOIS project in retrospectWilliam C. G. Ortel, Dina Yashchin. 1797-1800 [doi]
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- The relative importance of the factors affecting recogniser performance with telephone speechPeter J. Wyard. 1805-1808 [doi]
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- Speech input systems and their effect on written language skillsJames Monaghan, Christine Cheepen. 1817-1820 [doi]
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