Abstract is missing.
- An efficient predictive LR parser using pause information for continuously spoken sentence recognitionToshiyuki Takezawa, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 1-4 [doi]
- Integrating TDNN-based diphone recognition with table-driven morphology parsing for understanding of spoken KoreanKyunghee Kim, Geunbae Lee, Jong-Hyeok Lee, Hong Jeong. 5-8 [doi]
- Implementation issues and parsing speed evaluation of HMM-LR parserFrank O. Wallerstein, Akio Amano, Nobuo Hataoka. 9-12 [doi]
- One-pass continuous speech recognition directed by generalized LR parsingKenji Kita, Yoneo Yano, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 13-16 [doi]
- A continuous speech recognition system integrating additional acoustic knowledge sources in a data-driven beam search algorithmBernd Plannerer, Tobias Einsele, Martin Beham, Günther Ruske. 17-20 [doi]
- A context-free grammar compiler for speech understanding systemsMichael K. Brown, Bruce Buntschuh. 21-24 [doi]
- Probabilistic constraint for integrated speech and language processingKatashi Nagao, Kôiti Hasida, Takashi Miyata. 25-28 [doi]
- A non-linear architecture for speech and natural language processingWilliam H. Edmondson, Jon P. Iles. 29-32 [doi]
- Manifestations of contrastive emphasis in jaw movement in dialogueDonna Erickson, Kevin A. Lenzo, Masashi Sawada. 33-36 [doi]
- Jaw targets for strident fricativesSook-Hyang Lee, Mary E. Beckman, Michel Jackson. 37-40 [doi]
- Jaw motions in speech are controlled in (at least) three degrees of freedomDavid J. Ostry, Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson. 41-44 [doi]
- Extracting articulator movement parameters from a videodisc-based cineradiographic databaseMark K. Tiede, Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson. 45-48 [doi]
- Tongue-palate interactions in consonants vs. vowelsMaureen Stone, Andrew J. Lundberg. 49-52 [doi]
- Kinematic analysis of vowel production in GermanPhilip Hoole, Christine Mooshammer, Hans G. Tillmann. 53-56 [doi]
- Spread of CV and v-to-v coarticulation in british English: implications for the intelligibility of synthetic speechSarah Hawkins, Andrew Slater. 57-60 [doi]
- Mechanisms of vowel devoicing in JapaneseMariko Kondo. 61-64 [doi]
- Competition and segmentation in spoken word recognitionDennis Norris, James M. McQueen, Anne Cutler. 71-74 [doi]
- Recent results in automatic learning rules for semantic interpretationRoland Kuhn, Renato de Mori. 75-78 [doi]
- Semantic associations, acoustic metrics and adaptive language acquisitionAllen L. Gorin. 79-82 [doi]
- Extracting information in spontaneous speechWayne Ward. 83-86 [doi]
- Coping with aboutness complexity in information extraction from spoken dialoguesMegumi Kameyama, Isao Arima. 87-90 [doi]
- An example-based approach to semantic information extraction from Japanese spontaneous speechOtoya Shirotsuka, Ken ya Murakami. 91-94 [doi]
- A semantic interpretation based on detecting concepts for spontaneous speech understandingAkito Nagai, Yasushi Ishikawa, Kunio Nakajima. 95-98 [doi]
- Cooperative distributed processing for understanding dialogue utterancesAkira Shimazu, Kiyoshi Kogure, Mikio Nakano. 99-102 [doi]
- Incremental elaboration in generating and interpreting spontaneous speechMichio Okada, Satoshi Kurihara, Ryohei Nakatsu. 103-106 [doi]
- Semantic analysis in a robust spoken dialog systemWieland Eckert, Heinrich Niemann. 107-110 [doi]
- A user-initiated dialogue model and its implementation for spontaneous human-computer interactionHiroshi Kanazawa, Shigenobu Seto, Hideki Hashimoto, Hideaki Shinchi, Yoichi Takebayashi. 111-114 [doi]
- Automatic labeling of phrase accents in GermanAndreas Kießling, Ralf Kompe, Anton Batliner, Heinrich Niemann, Elmar Nöth. 115-118 [doi]
- Intonational structure of kumamoto Japanese: a perceptual validationKikuo Maekawa. 119-122 [doi]
- Evaluation of prosodic transcription labeling reliability in the tobi frameworkJohn F. Pitrelli, Mary E. Beckman, Julia Hirschberg. 123-126 [doi]
- A computational model of prosody perceptionNeil P. McAngus Todd, Guy J. Brown. 127-130 [doi]
- Inter-speaker interaction in speech rhythm: some durational properties of sentences and intersentence intervalsKuniko Kakita. 131-134 [doi]
- The final lengthening phenomenon in Swedish - a consequence of default sentence accent?Bertil Lyberg, Barbro Ekholm. 135-138 [doi]
- Concurrent effects of focal stress, postvocalic voicing and distinctive vowel length on syllable-internal timing in norwegianDawn M. Behne, Bente Moxness. 139-142 [doi]
- Prosodic pattern of utterance units in Japanese spoken dialogsKazuyuki Takagi, Shuichi Itahashi. 143-146 [doi]
- Some prosodical characteristics in spontaneous spoken dialogueAkira Ichikawa, Shinji Sato. 147-150 [doi]
- Wrestling the two-mass model to conform with real glottal wave formsInger Karlsson, Johan Liljencrants. 151-154 [doi]
- Automatic estimation of voice source parametersHelmer Strik, Lou Boves. 155-158 [doi]
- Simultaneous estimation of vocal tract and voice source parameters with application to speech synthesisWen Ding, Hideki Kasuya, Shuichi Adachi. 159-162 [doi]
- Frication and aspiration noise sources: contribution of experimental data to articulatory synthesisPierre Badin, Christine H. Shadle, Y. Pham Thi Ngoc, J. N. Carter, W. S. C. Chiu, Celia Scully, K. Stromberg. 163-166 [doi]
- Vocal tract model and 3-dimensional effect of articulationNobuhiro Miki, Pierre Badin, Y. Pham Thi Ngoc, Yoshihiko Ogawa. 167-170 [doi]
- 3-d FEM analysis of sound propagation in the nasal and paranasal cavitiesHisayoshi Suzuki, Jianwu Dang, Takayoshi Nakai, Akira Ishida, Hiroshi Sakakibara. 171-174 [doi]
- A physiological model of speech production and the implication of tongue-larynx interactionKiyoshi Honda, Hiroyuki Hirai, Jianwu Dang. 175-178 [doi]
- A dynamical articulatory model using potential task representationMasaaki Honda, Tokihiko Kaburagi. 179-182 [doi]
- Control of a klatt synthesizer by articulatory parametersKenneth N. Stevens, Corine A. Bickley, David R. Williams. 183-186 [doi]
- Speech recognition using HMM with decreased intra-group variation in the temporal structureNobuaki Minematsu, Keikichi Hirose. 187-190 [doi]
- Spoken word recognition using phoneme duration information estimated from speaking rate of input speechYukihiro Osaka, Shozo Makino, Toshio Sone. 191-194 [doi]
- State duration constraint using syllable duration for speech recognitionYumi Wakita, Eiichi Tsuboka. 195-198 [doi]
- Statistical modeling and recognition of rhythm in speechSatoru Hayamizu, Kazuyo Tanaka. 199-202 [doi]
- Recognition of Chinese tones in monosyllabic and disyllabic speech using HMMXinhui Hu, Keikichi Hirose. 203-206 [doi]
- Chinese speech understanding and spelling-word translation based on the statistics of corpusJun Wu, Zuoying Wang, Jiasong Sun, Jin Guo. 207-210 [doi]
- State-codebook based quasi continuous density hidden Markov model with applications to recognition of Chinese syllablesRen-Hua Wang, Hui Jiang. 211-214 [doi]
- Estimating linear discriminant parameters for continuous density hidden Markov modelsEluned S. Parris, Michael J. Carey. 215-218 [doi]
- Discriminative state-weighting in hidden Markov modelsFranz Wolfertstetter, Günther Ruske. 219-222 [doi]
- Speech recognition using tree-structured probability density functionTakao Watanabe, Koichi Shinoda, Keizaburo Takagi, Eiko Yamada. 223-226 [doi]
- Prediction of word confusabilities for speech recognitionDavid B. Roe, Michael D. Riley. 227-230 [doi]
- A comparison study of output probability functions in HMMs through spoken digit recognitionLi Zhao, Hideyuki Suzuki, Seiichi Nakagawa. 231-234 [doi]
- Connected spoken word recognition using a many-state Markov modelTomio Takara, Naoto Matayoshi, Kazuya Higa. 235-238 [doi]
- Global optimisation of HMM input transformationsFinn Tore Johansen. 239-242 [doi]
- Nonstationary-state hidden Markov model with state-dependent time warping: application to speech recognitionDon Sun, Li Deng. 243-246 [doi]
- Automatic word recognition based on second-order hidden Markov modelsJean-François Mari, Jean-Paul Haton. 247-250 [doi]
- On the application of multiple transition branch hidden Markov models to Chinese digit recognitionXixian Chen, Yinong Li, Xiaoming Ma, Lie Zhang. 251-254 [doi]
- Parallel model combination on a noise corrupted resource management taskM. J. F. Gales, Steve J. Young. 255-258 [doi]
- Robust signal preprocessing for HMM speech recognition in adverse conditionsJean-Baptiste Puel, Régine André-Obrecht. 259-262 [doi]
- A study on viterbi best-first search for isolated word recognition using duration-controlled HMMMasaharu Katoh, Masaki Kohda. 263-266 [doi]
- An HMM duration control algorithm with a low computational costSatoshi Takahashi, Yasuhiro Minami, Kiyohiro Shikano. 267-270 [doi]
- Fast log-likelihood computation for mixture densities in a high-dimensional feature spacePeter Beyerlein. 271-274 [doi]
- Time synchronous heuristic search in a stochastic segment based recognizerNick Cremelie, Jean-Pierre Martens. 275-278 [doi]
- Applying speech verification to a large data base of German to obtain a statistical survey about rules of pronunciationMaria-Barbara Wesenick, Florian Schiel. 279-282 [doi]
- Structure of allophonic models and reliable estimation of the contextual parametersDenis Jouvet, Katarina Bartkova, A. Stouff. 283-286 [doi]
- A probabilistic framework for word recognition using phonetic featuresChristoph Windheuser, Frédéric Bimbot, Patrick Haffner. 287-290 [doi]
- Nonlinear time alignment in stochastic trajectory models for speech recognitionMohamed Afify, Yifan Gong, Jean-Paul Haton. 291-294 [doi]
- Connected digit recognition using connectionist probability estimators and mixture-Gaussian densitiesDavid Lubensky, Ayman Asadi, Jayant M. Naik. 295-298 [doi]
- A trellis-based implementation of minimum error rate trainingKazuya Takeda, Tetsunori Murakami, Shingo Kuroiwa, Seiichi Yamamoto. 299-302 [doi]
- An initial study on speaker adaptation for Mandarin syllable recognition with minimum error discriminative trainingChih-Heng Lin, Pao-Chung Chang, Chien-Hsing Wu. 307-310 [doi]
- Some remarks on the compound accent rule in JapaneseShin-ichi Tanaka, Haruo Kubozono. 315-318 [doi]
- A prosodic analysis of three sentence types with WH words in KoreanSun-Ah Jun, Mira Oh. 323-326 [doi]
- Distinguishing the voiceless fricatives f and TH in English: a study of relevant acoustic propertiesKazue Hata, Heather Moran, Steve Pearson. 327-330 [doi]
- Correlation analysis between speech power and pitch frequency for twenty spoken languagesKenzo Itoh. 331-334 [doi]
- Intonation contours and the prominence of F0 peaksCarlos Gussenhoven, Toni C. M. Rietveld. 339-342 [doi]
- Phonation types analysis in standard ChineseAgnès Belotel-Grenié, Michel Grenié. 343-346 [doi]
- Accent phrase segmentation by finding n-best sequences of pitch pattern templatesMitsuru Nakai, Hiroshi Shimodaira. 347-350 [doi]
- Sound similarity judgments and segment prominence: a cross-linguistic studyBruce L. Derwing, Terrance M. Nearey. 351-354 [doi]
- Analysis of accent and intonation in Spanish based on a quantitative modelHiroya Fujisaki, Sumio Ohno, Kei-ichi Nakamura, Miguelina Guirao, Jorge A. Gurlekian. 355-358 [doi]
- Italian clusters in continuous speechEdda Farnetani, Maria Grazia Busa. 359-362 [doi]
- Rhythmic constraints in durational controlCynthia Grover, Jacques M. B. Terken. 363-366 [doi]
- A model for generating self-repairsYuji Sagawa, Masahiro Ito, Noboru Ohnishi, Noboru Sugie. 371-374 [doi]
- Accent identification with a view to assisting recognition (work in progress)Christopher Cleirigh, Julie Vonwiller. 375-378 [doi]
- Phonetic, phonological, morpho-syntactic and semantic functons of segmental duration in spoken telugu: acoustic evidenceK. Nagamma Reddy. 379-382 [doi]
- Features of prominent particles in Japanese discourse, frequency, functions and acoustic featuresToshiko Muranaka, Noriyo Hara. 395-398 [doi]
- Vowel quality assessment based on analysis of distinctive featuresShuping Ran, J. Bruce Millar, Iain MacLeod. 399-402 [doi]
- Differences in the fluctuation of attention during the listening of natural and synthetic passagesCristina Delogu, Stella Conte, Ciro Sementina. 403-406 [doi]
- Production and perception of words with identical segmental structure but different number of syllablesBarbara Heuft, Thomas Portele. 407-410 [doi]
- Generation of pronunciations from orthographies using transformation-based error-driven learningCaroline B. Huang, Mark A. Son-Bell, David M. Baggett. 411-414 [doi]
- Characteristics of mispronunciation and hesitation in Japanese tongue twisterHidenori Usuki, Jouji Suzuki, Tetsuya Shimamura. 415-418 [doi]
- A duration study of speech vowels produced in noiseJean-Claude Junqua. 419-422 [doi]
- PROTRAN: a prosody transplantation tool for text-to-speech applicationsBert Van Coile, L. Van Tichelen, Annemie Vorstermans, J. W. Jang, M. Staessen. 423-426 [doi]
- Complementary phonology a theoretical frame for labelling an acoustic data base of dialoguesKlaus J. Kohler. 427-430 [doi]
- An unsupervised speaker adaptation method for continuous parameter HMM by maximum a posteriori probability estimationYutaka Tsurumi, Seiichi Nakagawa. 431-434 [doi]
- Unsupervised speaker adaptation for speech recognition using demi-syllable HMMKoichi Shinoda, Takao Watanabe. 435-438 [doi]
- Minimum error rate training of inter-word context dependent acoustic model units in speech recognitionWu Chou, C.-E. Lee, Biing-Hwang Juang. 439-442 [doi]
- Incremental speaker adaptation using phonetically balanced training sentences for Mandarin syllable recognition based on segmental probability modelsJia-lin Shen, Hsin-Min Wang, Ren-Yuan Lyu, Lin-Shan Lee. 443-446 [doi]
- Incremental training of a speech recognizer for voice dialling-by-nameLorenzo Fissore, Giorgio Micca, Franco Ravera. 447-450 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation of continuous density HMMs using multivariate linear regressionC. J. Leggetter, Philip C. Woodland. 451-454 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation based on transfer vectors of multiple reference speakersKazumi Ohkura, Hiroki Ohnishi, Masayuki Iida. 455-458 [doi]
- Experiments with a new algorithm for fast speaker adaptationNikko Strom. 459-462 [doi]
- A study of applying adaptive learning to a multi-module systemTung-Hui Chiang, Yi-Chung Lin, Keh-Yih Su. 463-466 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation based on fuzzy vector quantizationJun ichi Nakahashi, Eiichi Tsuboka. 467-470 [doi]
- Discriminative training of garbage model for non-vocabulary utterance rejectionCelinda de la Torre, Alejandro Acero. 475-478 [doi]
- Distribution of devoiced high vowels in KoreanSun-Ah Jun, Mary E. Beckman. 479-482 [doi]
- CV as a phonological unit in KoreanYeo Bom Yoon. 483-486 [doi]
- Experiments on the syllable in hindiManjari Ohala. 487-490 [doi]
- Towards a universal, phonetically-based, theory of vowel harmonyJohn J. Ohala. 491-494 [doi]
- Perceptual parsing of nasal vowelsJohn Ingram, Tom Mylne. 495-498 [doi]
- On the perceptual distance between speech segmentsOded Ghitza, M. Mohan Sondhi. 499-502 [doi]
- Perception of central vowel with pre- and post-anchorsMasato Akagi, Astrid van Wieringen, Louis C. W. Pols. 503-506 [doi]
- Phonological mechanisms of French speech errorsMario Rossi, Evelyne Peter-Defare, Regine Vial. 507-510 [doi]
- Phonetic prototypes: modelling the effects of speaking rate on the internal structure of a voiceless category using recurrent neural networksMukhlis Abu-Bakar, Nick Chater. 511-514 [doi]
- EPG and acoustic study of some connected speech processesWilliam J. Hardcastle. 515-518 [doi]
- Syllable timing computation in the c/d modelOsamu Fujimura. 519-522 [doi]
- Contribution of psycholinguistic perspective for speech technologiesTatiana Slama-Cazacu. 523-526 [doi]
- Listener eye movement behavior during audiovisual speech perceptionEric Vatikiotis-Bateson, Inge-Marie Eigsti, Sumio Yano. 527-530 [doi]
- Auditory/visual speech in multimodal human interfacesDominic W. Massaro, Michael M. Cohen. 531-534 [doi]
- Effects of phonological and semantic information of kanji and kana characters on speech perceptionTadahisa Kondo, Kazuhiko Kakehi. 535-538 [doi]
- Human processing of auditory-visual information in speech perception: potential for multimodal human-machine interfacesPatricia K. Kuhl, Minoru Tsuzaki, Yoh ichi Tohkura, Andrew N. Meltzoff. 539-542 [doi]
- Visual perception of human bodies and faces for multi-modal interfacesAlex Pentland, Trevor Darrell. 543-546 [doi]
- See me, hear me: integrating automatic speech recognition and lip-readingPaul Duchnowski, Uwe Meier, Alex Waibel. 547-550 [doi]
- Integration themes in multimodal human-computer interactionSharon L. Oviatt, Erik Olsen. 551-554 [doi]
- A multimodal teleconferencing system using hands-free voice controlD. A. Berkley, James L. Flanagan, K. L. Shipley, Lawrence R. Rabiner. 555-558 [doi]
- Exploring the relation between mcgurk interference and ventriloquismPaul Bertelson, Jean Vroomen, Geert Wiegeraad, Béatrice de Gelder. 559-562 [doi]
- Naturalness of the interaction in multimodal applicationsJean-Claude Junqua, Philippe Morin. 563-566 [doi]
- Evaluation of multimodal interface using spoken language and pointing gesture on interior design systemHaru Ando, Yoshinori Kitahara, Nobuo Hataoka. 567-570 [doi]
- Linguistic and paralinguistic differences between multimodal and telephone-only dialoguesKyung-ho Loken-Kim, Fumihiro Yato, Laurel Fais, Tsuyoshi Morimoto, Akira Kurematsu. 571-574 [doi]
- An investigation of the potential role of speech production models in automatic speech recognitionR. C. Rose, Juergen Schroeter, M. Mohan Sondhi. 575-578 [doi]
- A trajectory formation model of articulatory movements based on the motor tasks of phoneme-specific vocal tract shapesTokihiko Kaburagi, Masaaki Honda. 579-582 [doi]
- Articulatory trajectories generated by the control of the vocal tract by a neural networkMartine George, Paul Jospa, Alain Soquet. 583-586 [doi]
- Neural network prediction of lip shape from muscle EMG in Japanese speechMakoto Hirayama, Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson, Vincent Gracco, Mitsuo Kawato. 587-590 [doi]
- Estimation of the lateral shape of a tongue from speechMasahiro Hiraike, Shigehisa Shimizu, Takao Mizutani, Kiyoshi Hashimoto. 591-594 [doi]
- The acoustic-articulatory mapping and the variational methodPaul Jospa, Alain Soquet. 595-598 [doi]
- Aerodynamical, geometrical and mechanical aspects of bilabial plosives productionXavier Pelorson, T. Lallouache, S. Tourret, C. Bouffartigue, Pierre Badin. 599-602 [doi]
- Investigation of the acoustic characteristics of the velum for vowelsJianwu Dang, Kiyoshi Honda. 603-606 [doi]
- Measurement of acoustic impedance density distribution in the near field of the labial hornKunitoshi Motoki, Pierre Badin, Nobuhiro Miki. 607-610 [doi]
- Explicit relations between resonance frequencies and vocal tract cross sections in loss-less kelly-lochbaum and distinctive region vocal tract modelsJean Schoentgen, Sorin Ciocea. 611-614 [doi]
- Improving the kelly-lochbaum vocal tract model using conical tube sections and fractional delay filtering techniquesVesa Välimäki, Matti Karjalainen. 615-618 [doi]
- Measurement of 3d shapes of vocal tract, dental crown and nasal cavity using MRI: vowels and fricativesMasafumi Matsumura, Takuya Nukawa, Koji Shimizu, Yasuji Hashimoto, Tatsuya Morita. 619-622 [doi]
- Accurate measurement of vocal tract shapes from magnetic resonance images of child, female and male subjectsChang-Sheng Yang, Hideki Kasuya. 623-626 [doi]
- An MRI study of fricative consonantsShrikanth Narayanan, Abeer Alwan, Katherine Haker. 627-630 [doi]
- Phoneme extraction using via point estimation of real speechEric Vatikiotis-Bateson, Mark K. Tiede, Yasuhiro Wada, Vincent Gracco, Mitsuo Kawato. 631-634 [doi]
- 3d FEM analysis of vocal tract model of elliptic tube with inhomogeneous-wall impedanceHiroki Matsuzaki, Nobuhiro Miki, Nobuo Nagai, Tohru Hirohku, Yoshihiko Ogawa. 635-638 [doi]
- Chaotic characteristics of voice fluctuation and its model explanation: normal and pathological voicesYuki Kakita, Hitoshi Okamoto. 639-642 [doi]
- Real-time processing of electroglottographic waveforms for the evaluation of phonation typesB. Craig Dickson, John H. Esling, Roy C. Snell. 647-650 [doi]
- Global pitch range and the production of low tones in English intonationDonna Erickson, Kiyoshi Honda, Hiroyuki Hirai, Mary E. Beckman, Seiji Niimi. 651-654 [doi]
- Measument of palatolingual contact pressure during consonant productions using strain gauge transducer mounted platal plateMasafumi Matsumura, Kazuo Kimura, Katsumi Yoshino, Takashi Tachimura, Takeshi Wada. 655-658 [doi]
- A study of sensor arrangements for detecting movements and inclinations of tongue point during speechKohichi Ogata, Yorinobu Sonoda. 659-662 [doi]
- Estimation of temporal processing unit of speech motor programming for Japanese words based on the measurement of reaction timeShinobu Masaki, Kiyoshi Honda. 663-666 [doi]
- Applications of speech recognition technology in telecommunicationsJay G. Wilpon, David B. Roe. 667-670 [doi]
- Speech recognition applications in JapanTsuneo Nitta. 671-674 [doi]
- Trends in the applications of and market for speech synthesis technologyTomohisa Hirokawa. 675-678 [doi]
- OASIS - a speech recognition system for telephone service ordersBaruch Mazor, Jerome Braun, Bonnie Zeigler, Solomon Lerner, Ming-Whei Feng, Han Zhou. 679-682 [doi]
- A prototype voice-response questionnaire for the u.s. censusRonald A. Cole, David G. Novick, Mark A. Fanty, Pieter J. E. Vermeulen, Stephen Sutton, Daniel C. Burnett, Johan Schalkwyk. 683-686 [doi]
- A speech-to-text transcription system for medical diagnosesToshiaki Tsuboi, Shigeru Homma, Shoichi Matsunaga. 687-690 [doi]
- Towards an automatic dictation system for translators : the transtalk projectMarc Dymetman, Julie Brousseau, George F. Foster, Pierre Isabelle, Yves Normandin, Pierre Plamondon. 691-694 [doi]
- Real-time, speaker-independent, continuous Spanish speech recognition for personal computer desktop command & controlKamil A. Grajski, Kurt Rodarmer. 695-698 [doi]
- An automatic voice dialing system developed on PC speech i/o platformJun Noguchi, Shinsuke Sakai, Kaichiro Hatazaki, Ken-ichi Iso, Takao Watanabe. 699-702 [doi]
- A realtime prototype of an automatic inquiry systemMartin Oerder, Harald Aust. 703-706 [doi]
- GALAXY: a human-language interface to on-line travel informationDavid Goddeau, Eric Brill, James R. Glass, Christine Pao, Michael S. Phillips, Joseph Polifroni, Stephanie Seneff, Victor W. Zue. 707-710 [doi]
- Generating prosodic structure for Swedish text-to-speechMerle Horne, Marcus Filipsson. 711-714 [doi]
- Assigning intonation elements and prosodic phrasing for English speech synthesis from high level linguistic inputAlan W. Black, Paul Taylor. 715-718 [doi]
- Segmental effects on timing and height of pitch contoursJan P. H. van Santen, Julia Hirschberg. 719-722 [doi]
- A study on pitch pattern generation using HMM-based statistical informationToshiaki Fukada, Yasuhiro Komori, Takashi Aso, Yasunori Ohora. 723-726 [doi]
- Using a hybrid model in a text-to-sppech system to enlarge prosodic modificationsOlivier Boëffard, Fábio Violaro. 727-730 [doi]
- A new method for estimating Japanese speech rateAkio Ando, Eiichi Miyasaka. 731-734 [doi]
- Automatic grapheme-to-phoneme conversion of dutch namesEmmy M. Konst, Lou Boves. 735-738 [doi]
- Diphone synthesis for the welsh languageBriony Williams. 739-742 [doi]
- Pause control in Japanese text-to-speech conversion system with lexical discourse grammarShinichi Doi, Kazuhiko Iwata, Kazunori Muraki, Yukio Mitome. 743-746 [doi]
- Generation of prosody in speech synthesis using large speech data-baseNaohiro Sakurai, Takerni Mochida, Tetsunori Kobayashi, Katsuhiko Shirai. 747-750 [doi]
- Preserving naturalness in synthetic voices while minimizing variation in formant frequencies and bandwidthsNiels-Jorn Dyhr, Marianne Elmlund, Carsten Henriksen. 751-754 [doi]
- Speech production: Insights from a study of progressive aphasiaKaralyn Patterson, Karen Croot, John R. Hodges. 755-758 [doi]
- Functional mapping of cerebral mechanism of reading in the Japanese languageMakoto Iwata, Yasuhisa Sakurai, Toshimitsu Momose. 759-762 [doi]
- Cortical representation of speech perception and production, as revealed by direct cortical electrical interferenceDana F. Boatman, Ronald P. Lesser, Barry Gordon. 763-766 [doi]
- Investigating word recognition and language comprehension with event-related brain potentialsMichael D. Rugg, Catherine J. C. Cox, Michael C. Doyle. 767-780 [doi]
- Dissociations in word deafnessSue Franklin, Julie Morris, Judy Turner. 771-774 [doi]
- Recovery mechanism of naming disorders in aphasic patients: effects of different training modalitiesAkira Uno, Jun Tanemura, Koichi Higo. 775-778 [doi]
- Stochastic context-free language modeling with evolutional grammarsMichael K. Brown, Stephen C. Glinski. 779-782 [doi]
- A lightweight parser for speech understandingNigel Ward. 783-786 [doi]
- Dynamic probabilistic grammar for spoken language disambiguationTakeshi Kawabata. 787-790 [doi]
- Speaker-consistent parsing for speaker-independent continuous speech recognitionKouichi Yamaguchi, Harald Singer, Shoichi Matsunaga, Shigeki Sagayama. 791-794 [doi]
- A stochastic morphological analyzer for spontaneously spoken languagesMasaaki Nagata. 795-798 [doi]
- Automatic adaptive understanding of spoken language by cooperation of syntactic parsing and semantic primingJean-Yves Antoine, Jean Caelen, Bertrand Caillaud. 799-802 [doi]
- A maximum entropy model for parsingAdwait Ratnaparkhi, Salim Roukos, Todd Ward. 803-806 [doi]
- Sentence spotting using continuous structuring methodJiro Kiyama, Yoshiaki Itoh, Ryuichi Oka. 807-810 [doi]
- Continuous speech recognition using a dialog-conditioned stochastic language modelHiroyuki Sakamoto, Shoichi Matsunaga. 811-814 [doi]
- Keyword and phrase spotting with heuristic language modelTatsuya Kawahara, Toshihiko Munetsugu, Norihide Kitaoka, Shuji Doshita. 815-818 [doi]
- A spontaneous speech recognition algorithm using word trigram models and filled-pause procedureJin ichi Murakami, Shoichi Matsunaga. 819-822 [doi]
- Active/non-active word control using garbage model, unknown word re-evaluation in speech conversationMasayuki Yamada, Yasuhiro Komori, Yasunori Ohora. 823-826 [doi]
- Error-responsive modifications to speech recognizers: negative n-gramsL. Chase, R. Rosenfeld, Wayne Ward. 827-830 [doi]
- Towards better language models for spontaneous speechBernhard Suhm, Alex Waibel. 831-834 [doi]
- Empirical acquisition of language models for speech recognitionMichael K. McCandless, James R. Glass. 835-838 [doi]
- Prediction of prosodic phrase boundaries using stochastic context-free grammarShigeru Fujio, Yoshinori Sagisaka, Norio Higuchi. 839-842 [doi]
- Language models for spontaneous speech recognition: a bootstrap method for learning phrase digramsEgidio P. Giachin, Paolo Baggia, Giorgio Micca. 843-846 [doi]
- Inferring linguistic structure in spoken languageMonika Woszczyna, Alex Waibel. 847-850 [doi]
- Back-off smoothing in a syntactic approach to language modellingGermán Bordel, I. Torrest, Enrique Vidal. 851-854 [doi]
- Computer assisted grammar constructionH.-H. Shih, Steve J. Young. 855-858 [doi]
- Language model estimations and representations for real-time continuous speech recognitionGiuliano Antoniol, Fabio Brugnara, Mauro Cettolo, Marcello Federico. 859-862 [doi]
- Sub-dictionary statistical modeling for isolated word recognitionBruno Jacob, Régine André-Obrecht. 863-866 [doi]
- A class bigram model for very large corpusMichèle Jardino. 867-870 [doi]
- A spoken dialogue system based on hierarchical feedback mechanismAkio Amano, Toshiyuki Odaka. 871-874 [doi]
- A dedicated task-oriented dialogue theory in support of spoken language dialogue systems designNiels Ole Bernsen, Laila Dybkjær, Hans Dybkjær. 875-878 [doi]
- Interactive speech dialogue system using simultaneous understandingFarzad Ehsani, Kaichiro Hatazaki, Jun Noguchi, Takao Watanabe. 879-882 [doi]
- A cooperative man-machine dialogue model for problem solvingMasahiro Araki, Taro Watanabe, Felix C. M. Quimbo, Shuji Doshita. 883-886 [doi]
- A multi-modal dialogue system for telephone directory assistanceOsamu Yoshioka, Yasuhiro Minami, Kiyohiro Shikano. 887-890 [doi]
- Automated query identification in English dialogueMark Terry, Randall Sparks, Patrick Obenchain. 891-894 [doi]
- Robust discourse processing considering misrecognition in spoken dialogue systemKeiichi Sakai, Yuji Ikeda, Minoru Fujita. 895-898 [doi]
- Analysis of multimodal interaction data in human communicationKeiko Watanuki, Kenji Sakamoto, Fumio Togawa. 899-902 [doi]
- Changes in user s responses with use of a speech dialog systemKazuhiro Arai. 903-906 [doi]
- Collecting and analyzing nonverbal elements for maintenance of dialog using a wizard of oz simulationKatunobu Itou, Tomoyosi Akiba, Osamu Hasegawa, Satoru Hayamizu, Kazuyo Tanaka. 907-910 [doi]
- Porting the bilingual voyager system to ItalianGiovanni Flammia, James R. Glass, Michael S. Phillips, Joseph Polifroni, Stephanie Seneff, Victor W. Zue. 911-914 [doi]
- Similarity-based identification of repairs in Japanese spoken languageGen-ichiro Kikui, Tsuyoshi Morimoto. 915-918 [doi]
- Rapid prototyping of a dialogue system using a generic dialogue development platformLars Bo Larsen, Anders Baekgaard. 919-922 [doi]
- Heuristics for generating acoustic stress in dialogues and examination of their validityShozo Naito, Akira Shimazu. 923-926 [doi]
- Application and dialogue in the sundial systemJacques Siroux, Mouloud Kharoune, Marc Guyomard. 927-930 [doi]
- A dialog analysis using information of the previous sentenceShin-ichiro Kamei, Shinichi Doi, Takako Komatsu, Susumu Akamine, Hitoshi Iida, Kazunori Muraki. 931-934 [doi]
- Recognizing plans in more natural dialogue utterancesKiyoshi Kogure, Akira Shimazu, Mikio Nakano. 935-938 [doi]
- Understanding of time constituents in spoken language dialoguesBernd Hildebrandt, Gernot A. Fink, Franz Kummert, Gerhard Sagerer. 939-942 [doi]
- An analysis of Japanese sentences in spoken dialogue and its application to communicative intention recognitionTadahiko Kumamoto, Akira Ito, Tsuyoshi Ebina. 943-946 [doi]
- Extra propositional focus and belief revisionBeth Ann Hockey. 947-950 [doi]
- Frames, a unified model for the representation of reference and space in a man-machine dialogueDaniel Schang, Laurent Romary. 951-954 [doi]
- Roles of interjectory utterances in spoken discourseMasahito Kawamori, Akira Shimazu, Kiyoshi Kogure. 955-958 [doi]
- Communicative mode dependent contribution from the recipient in information providing dialogueYukiko Ishikawa. 959-962 [doi]
- Strategies for oral dialogue controlAlain Cozannet, Jacques Siroux. 963-966 [doi]
- Robust speech understandingAstrid Brietzmann, Fritz Class, Ute Ehrlich, Paul Heisterkamp, Alfred Kaltenmeier, Klaus Mecklenburg, Peter Regel-Brietzmann. 967-970 [doi]
- Dialog context dependencies of utterances generated from concept reperesentationYoichi Yamashita, Keiichi Tajima, Yasuo Nomura, Riichiro Mizoguchi. 971-974 [doi]
- Effects on utterances caused by knowledge on the hearerShu Nakazato, Katsuhiko Shirai. 975-978 [doi]
- An efficient data-driven model for cooperative spoken dialogueA. Ferrieux, M. David Sadek. 979-982 [doi]
- Multilingual language generation across multiple domainsJames R. Glass, Joseph Polifroni, Stephanie Seneff. 983-986 [doi]
- Compensation of telephone line effects for robust speech recognitionChafic Mokbel, R. Paches-Leal, Denis Jouvet, Jean Monné. 987-990 [doi]
- Telephone line characteristic adaptation using vector field smoothing techniqueJun-ichi Takahashi, Shigeki Sagayama. 991-994 [doi]
- A study of speech recognition system robustness to microphone variations: experiments in phonetic classificationJane Chang, Victor W. Zue. 995-998 [doi]
- Isolated word recognition using models for acoustic phonetic variability by lombard effectTadashi Suzuki, Kunio Nakajima, Yoshiharu Abe. 999-1002 [doi]
- A source generator based production model for environmental robustness in speech recognitionJohn H. L. Hansen, Brian D. Womack, Levent M. Arslan. 1003-1006 [doi]
- A frequency-weighted continuous density HMM for noisy speech recognitionHiroshi Matsumoto, Hiroyuki Imose. 1007-1010 [doi]
- A study on adaptations of cepstral and delta cepstral coefficients for noisy speech recognitionLee-Min Lee, Hsiao-Chuan Wang. 1011-1014 [doi]
- A comparative study of feature representations for robust speech recognition in adverse environmentsKuldip K. Paliwal, Bishnu S. Atal. 1015-1018 [doi]
- ARDOSS: autoregressive domain spectral subtraction for robust speech recognition in additive noiseHugo Van Hamme. 1019-1022 [doi]
- Speech recognition with rapid environment adaptation by spectrum equalizationKeizaburo Takagi, Hiroaki Hattori, Takao Watanabe. 1023-1026 [doi]
- Signal processing for robust speech recognitionRichard M. Stern, Fu-Hua Liu, Pedro J. Moreno, Alejandro Acero. 1027-1030 [doi]
- A comparison of three noisy speech recognition approachesOlivier Siohan, Yifan Gong, Jean-Paul Haton. 1031-1034 [doi]
- Nonlinear speech analysis using the teager energy operator with application to speech classification under stressDouglas A. Cairns, John H. L. Hansen. 1035-1038 [doi]
- Analysis of non-linear speech generating dynamicsPaul A. Moakes, Steve W. Beet. 1039-1042 [doi]
- Mel-generalized cepstral analysis - a unified approach to speech spectral estimationKeiichi Tokuda, Takao Kobayashi, Takashi Masuko, Satoshi Imai. 1043-1046 [doi]
- Combining auditory representations using fuzzy setsI. R. Gransden, Steve W. Beet. 1047-1050 [doi]
- Sbcor spectrum taking autocorrelation coefficients at integral multiples of 1/CF into accountShoji Kajita, Fumitada Itakura. 1051-1054 [doi]
- Pitch extraction from root cepstrumHema A. Murthy. 1055-1058 [doi]
- Voice parameter estimation using sequential SVD and wave shaping filter bankSunghoon Hong, Sangki Kang, SouGuil Ann. 1059-1062 [doi]
- Self excited threshold auto-regressive models of the glottal pulse and the speech signalJean Schoentgen. 1063-1066 [doi]
- Determination of glottal excitation cycles for voice quality analysisWolfgang J. Hess. 1067-1070 [doi]
- Strategies for voice separation based on harmonicityAlain de Cheveigné. 1071-1074 [doi]
- Speech analysis technique for PSOLA synthesis based on complex cepstrum analysis and residual excitationYukio Mitome. 1075-1078 [doi]
- Intonation pattern with focus and related muscle activities in tokyo dialectShigeru Kiritani, Kikuo Maekawa, Hajime Hirose. 1079-1082 [doi]
- The effects of contrastive accent and lexical stress upon temporal distribution in a sentenceJianfen Cao. 1083-1086 [doi]
- Speech rate and syllable timing in spontaneous speechHenrietta J. Cedergren, Hélène Perreault. 1087-1090 [doi]
- An experimental phonetic study of speech rhythm in standard KoreanHyunbok Lee, Narn-taek Jin, Cheol-jae Seong, Il-jin Jung, Seung-mie Lee. 1091-1094 [doi]
- A rhythm theory for spontaneous speech: the role of vowel amplitude in the rhythmic hierarchyNoriko Umeda, Toby Wedmore. 1095-1098 [doi]
- Modelling Swedish prosody in a dialogue frameworkGösta Bruce, Björn Granström, Kjell Gustafson, David House, Paul Touati. 1099-1102 [doi]
- Prosodic characteristics of a spoken dialogue for information queryHiroya Fujisaki, Sumio Ohno, Masafumi Osame, Mayumi Sakata, Keikichi Hirose. 1103-1106 [doi]
- Analysis of prosodic and linguistic features of spontaneous Japanese conversational speechShoichi Takeda, Yoshiyuki Itoh, Norifumi Sakuma, Kei Yokosato. 1107-1110 [doi]
- Combining the use of duration and F0 in an automatic analysis of dialogue prosodyNick Campbell. 1111-1114 [doi]
- Improving parsing by incorporating prosodic clause boundaries into a grammarGabriele Bakenecker, Hans Ulrich Block, Anton Batliner, Ralf Kompe, Elmar Nöth, Peter Regel-Brietzmann. 1115-1118 [doi]
- A prosodic recognition module based on linear discriminant analysisAndrew Hunt. 1119-1122 [doi]
- Use of prosodic features in the recognition of continuous speechKeikichi Hirose, Atsuhiro Sakurai, Hiroyuki Konno. 1123-1126 [doi]
- The inconsistency of consistency effects in reading: the case of Japanese kanji phonologyTaeko Nakayama Wydell, Brian Butterworth. 1127-1130 [doi]
- An acoustic analysis of unreleased stop consonants in word-final positionValter Ciocca, Livia Wong, Lydia K. H. So. 1131-1134 [doi]
- Speech segmentation in dutch: no role for the syllableJean Vroomen, Béatrice de Gelder. 1135-1138 [doi]
- Do ambiguous fricatives rhyme? lexical involvement in phonetic decision-making depends on task demandsJames M. McQueen. 1139-1142 [doi]
- Moraic segmentation in Japanese revisitedPierre A. Hallé, Juan Segui. 1143-1146 [doi]
- Prosodic information and processing of temporarily ambiguous constructions in JapaneseJennifer J. Venditti, Hiroko Yamashita. 1147-1150 [doi]
- Role of prosodic features in the human process of speech perceptionNobuaki Minematsu, Keikichi Hirose. 1151-1154 [doi]
- Limitations of lip-reading advantage by desynchronizing visual and auditory information in speechMasahiro Hashimoto, Hideaki Seki. 1155-1158 [doi]
- Word meaning deafness: effects of word typeSue Franklin, Judy Turner, Julie Morris. 1159-1162 [doi]
- Concept and grammar acquisition based on combining with visual and auditory informationMikio Masukata, Seiichi Nakagawa. 1163-1166 [doi]
- The punch and judy man: a study of phonological / phonetic variationGavin J. Dempster, Sheila M. Williams, Sandra P. Whiteside. 1167-1170 [doi]
- The auditory perception of children s age and sexHartmut Traunmller, Renée van Bezooijen. 1171-1174 [doi]
- Are representations used for talker identification available for talker normalization?James S. Magnuson, Reiko Akahane-Yamada, Howard C. Nusbaum. 1175-1178 [doi]
- Non-physiological differences between male and female speech: evidence from the delayed F0 fall phenomenon in JapaneseYoko Hasegawa, Kazue Hata. 1179-1182 [doi]
- Speaker individualities in speech spectral envelopesTatsuya Kitamura, Masato Akagi. 1183-1186 [doi]
- Articulatory description of affricate production in speech disordered children using electropalatography (EPG)Fiona Gibbon, William J. Hardcastle. 1191-1194 [doi]
- A phonetic and phonological analysis of stuttering in JapaneseAkira Ujihira, Haruo Kubozono. 1195-1198 [doi]
- Perception, production and training of new consonant contrasts in children with articulation disordersDonald G. Jamieson, Susan Rvachew. 1199-1202 [doi]
- A cross-linguistic study of lateral /s/ using electropalatography (EPG)N. Suzuki, H. Dent, Masahiko Wakumoto, Fiona Gibbon, Ken-ich Michi, William J. Hardcastle. 1207-1210 [doi]
- Prosody of recurrent utterances in aphasic patientsJunko Matsubara, Toshihiro Kashiwagi, Morio Kohno, Hirotaka Tanabe, Asako Kashiwagi. 1211-1214 [doi]
- A computer-aided phonetic instruction system for south-asian languagesTsuyoshi Nara, P. Bhaskararao. 1219-1222 [doi]
- Rhythm processing by a patient with pure anarthria: some suggestions on the role of rhythm in spoken language processingMorio Kohno, Junko Matsubara, Katsuko Higuchi, Toshihiro Kashiwagi. 1223-1226 [doi]
- Mechanisms producing recurring utterances in a patient with slowly progressive aphasiaMasato Kaneko. 1231-1234 [doi]
- Hypermedia for spoken language educationKiyokata Katoh, Takako Ayusawa, Yukihiro Nishinuma, Richard Harrison, Kikuko Yamashita. 1235-1238 [doi]
- A text-to-speech system for application by visually handicapped and illiterateP. Bhaskararao, Venkata N. Peri, Vishwas Udpikar. 1239-1242 [doi]
- Talker localization and speech recognition using a microphone array and a cross-powerspectrum phase analysisDiego Giuliani, Maurizio Omologo, Piergiorgio Svaizer. 1243-1246 [doi]
- System of microphone arrays and neural networks for robust speech recognition in multimedia environmentsQiguang Lin, Ea-Ee Jan, Chiwei Che, Bert de Vries. 1247-1250 [doi]
- Estimating performance of pipelined spoken language translation systemsManny Rayner, David M. Carter, Patti Price, Bertil Lyberg. 1251-1254 [doi]
- Generation of multi-syllable nonsense words for the assessment of Korean text-to-speech systemCheol-Woo Jo, Kyung Tae Kim, Yong-Ju Lee. 1255-1258 [doi]
- Voice map: a dialogue-based spoken language information access systemAruna Bayya, Michael Durian, Lori Meiskey, Rebecca Root, Randall Sparks, Mark Terry. 1259-1262 [doi]
- Development of a document preparation system with speech command using EDR electronic dictionariesShigenobu Seto, Kazuhiro Kimura. 1263-1266 [doi]
- Radiological reporting by speech recognition: the a.re.s. systemBianca Angelini, Giuliano Antoniol, Fabio Brugnara, Mauro Cettolo, Marcello Federico, Roberto Fiutem, Gianni Lazzari. 1267-1270 [doi]
- A spoken language system for information retrievalSamir Bennacef, Hélène Bonneau-Maynard, Jean-Luc Gauvain, Lori Lamel, Wolfgang Minker. 1271-1274 [doi]
- Recogniser response modelling from testing on series of minimal word pairsBørge Lindberg. 1275-1278 [doi]
- A study on the problems for apllication of voice interface based on ford recognitionToshimitsu Minowa, Yasuhiko Arai, Hisanori Kanasashi, Tatsuya Kimura, Takuji Kawamoto. 1279-1282 [doi]
- A UI design support tool for multimodal spoken dialogue systemHiroyuki Kamio, Mika Koorita, Hiroshi Matsu ura, Masafumi Tamura, Tsuneo Nitta. 1283-1286 [doi]
- Multimodal drawing tool using speech, mouse and key-boardTakuya Nishirnoto, Nobutoshi Shida, Tetsunori Kobayashi, Katsuhiko Shirai. 1287-1290 [doi]
- Generation of non-entry words from entries of the natural speech databaseYasuhiko Arai, Toshimitsu Minowa, Hiroko Yoshida, Hirofumi Nishimura, Hiroyvki Kamata, Takashi Honda. 1291-1294 [doi]
- MECALLSAT: a multimedia environment for computer-aided language learning incorporating speech assessment techniquesPedro Gómez Vilda, Daniel Martinez, Victor Nieto Lluis, Victoria Rodellar. 1295-1298 [doi]
- Improving recognizer acceptance through robust, natural speech repairArthur E. McNair, Alex Waibel. 1299-1302 [doi]
- User acceptance of automatic speech recognition in telephone servicesDavid Fay. 1303-1306 [doi]
- Identifying salient usability attributes for automated telephone servicesStephen Love, R. T. Dutton, John C. Foster, Mervyn A. Jack, F. W. M. Stentiford. 1307-1310 [doi]
- Recognition accuracy methods and measuresFrank H. Wu, Monica A. Maries. 1315-1318 [doi]
- A feature-profile for application-specific speech synthesis assessment and evaluationUte Jekosch, Louis C. W. Pols. 1319-1322 [doi]
- A description model for speech assessment tests with subjectsThomas Hegehofer. 1323-1326 [doi]
- VLSI implementation of a robust hybrid parameter-extractor and neural network for speech decodingVictoria Rodellar, Antonio Diaz, Jose Gallardo, Virginia Peinado, Victor Nieto Lluis, Pedro Gómez Vilda. 1327-1330 [doi]
- An objective measure for qualitatively assessing low-bit-rate coded speechToshiro Watanabe, Shinji Hayashi. 1331-1334 [doi]
- Performance comparison of recognition systems based on the akaike information criterionKazuhiko Ozeki. 1335-1338 [doi]
- Robust speech recognition in the automobileNobutoshi Hanai, Richard M. Stern. 1339-1342 [doi]
- On the development of a dictation machine for Spanish: DIVOJavier Macías Guarasa, Manuel A. Leandro, José Colás, Alvaro Villegas, Santiago Aguilera, José Manuel Pardo. 1343-1346 [doi]
- Environmental robustness in automatic speech recognition using physiologic ally-motivated signal processingYoshiaki Ohshima, Richard M. Stern. 1347-1350 [doi]
- Recognition ********* a dynamic network decoder design for large vocabulary speech recognitionV. Valtchev, J. J. Odell, Philip C. Woodland, Steve J. Young. 1351-1354 [doi]
- A word graph algorithm for large vocabulary, continuous speech recognitionHermann Ney, Xavier L. Aubert. 1355-1358 [doi]
- Fast match for segment-based large vocabulary continuous speech recognitionMichael S. Phillips, David Goddeau. 1359-1362 [doi]
- Multiple-pronunciation lexical modeling in a speaker independent speech understanding systemChuck Wooters, Andreas Stolcke. 1363-1366 [doi]
- MMIE training for large vocabulary continuous speech recognitionYves Normandin, Roxane Lacouture, Régis Cardin. 1367-1370 [doi]
- An intelligent and efficient word-class-based Chinese language model for Mandarin speech recognition with very large vocabularyYen-Ju Yang, Sung-Chien Lin, Lee-Feng Chien, Keh-Jiann Chen, Lin-Shan Lee. 1371-1374 [doi]
- Tree-structured speaker clustering for speaker-independent continuous speech recognitionTetsuo Kosaka, Shoichi Matsunaga, Shigeki Sagayama. 1375-1378 [doi]
- Compact-size speaker independent speech recognizer for large vocabulary using compats methodTatsuya Kimura, Hiroyasu Kuwano, Akira Ishida, Taisuke Watanabe, Shoji Hiraoka. 1379-1382 [doi]
- A keyword-spotting unit for speaker-independent spontaneous speech recognitionYasuyuki Masai, Jun ichi Iwasaki, Shin-ichi Tanaka, Tsuneo Nitta, Masahiro Yao, Tomohiro Onogi, Akira Nakayama. 1383-1386 [doi]
- KT-stock: a speaker-independent large-vocabulary speech recognition system over the telephoneMyoung-Wan Koo, Sang Kyu Park, Kyung-Tae Kong, Sam-joo Doh. 1387-1390 [doi]
- Speaker independent continuous speech recognition using an acoustic-phonetic Italian corpusBianca Angelini, Fabio Brugnara, Daniele Falavigna, Diego Giuliani, Roberto Gretter, Maurizio Omologo. 1391-1394 [doi]
- The auditory image model as a preprocessor for spoken languageRoy D. Patterson, Timothy R. Anderson, Michael Allerhand. 1395-1398 [doi]
- Effects of natural auditory feedback on fundamental frequency controlHideki Kawahara. 1399-1402 [doi]
- Unified architecture for auditory scene analysis and spoken language processingTomohiro Nakatani, Takeshi Kawabata, Hiroshi G. Okuno. 1403-1406 [doi]
- Rhythmic structure of word blends in EnglishAnne Cutler, Duncan Young. 1407-1410 [doi]
- Perception for VCV speech uttered simultaneously or sequentially by two talkersKazuhiko Kakehi, Kazumi Kato. 1411-1414 [doi]
- Perception of time-compressed/expanded Japanese words depends on the number of perceived phonemesShigeaki Amano. 1415-1418 [doi]
- The effect of overlap position in phonological priming between spoken wordsMonique Radeau, Juan Segui, José Morais. 1419-1422 [doi]
- A cognitive model of inferring unknown words and uncertain sound sequenceMasuzo Yanagida. 1423-1426 [doi]
- A moraic nasal and a syllable structure in JapaneseTakashi Otake, Kiyoko Yoneyama. 1427-1430 [doi]
- Temporal organization of bimodal speech informationPaula M. T. Smeele, Anne C. Sittig, Vincent J. van Heuven. 1431-1434 [doi]
- The use of auditory and phonetic memories in the discrimination of stop consonants under audio-visual presentationSumi Shigeno. 1435-1438 [doi]
- Controlling voice quality of synthetic speechInger Karlsson. 1439-1442 [doi]
- Voice quality of synthetic speech: representation and evaluationLouis C. W. Pols. 1443-1446 [doi]
- The role of F0 and duration in signalling affect in Japanese: anger, kindness and PolitenessEtsuko Ofuka, Hélène Valbret, Mitch G. Waterman, Nick Campbell, Peter Roach. 1447-1450 [doi]
- Voice source parameters in continuous speech, transformation of LF-parametersGunnar Fant, Anita Kruckenberg, Johan Liljencrants, Mats Båvegård. 1451-1454 [doi]
- Speaking style conversion by changing prosodic parameters and formant frequenciesMasanobu Abe, Hideyuki Mizuno. 1455-1458 [doi]
- Voice source and vocal tract characteristics associated with speaker individualityHideki Kasuya, Xuan Tan, Chang-Sheng Yang. 1459-1462 [doi]
- Phoneme-level voice individuality used in speaker recognitionSadaoki Furui, Tomoko Matsui. 1463-1466 [doi]
- Controllability of voice quality: evidence from physiological and acoustic observationsSatoshi Imaizumi, Hartono Abdoerrachman, Seiji Niimi. 1467-1470 [doi]
- Spectral correlates of breathiness and roughness for different types of vowel fragmentsGuus de Krom. 1471-1474 [doi]
- Analysis of pitch dependence of pharyngeal, faucal, and larynx-height voice quality settingsJohn H. Esling, Lynn Marie Heap, Roy C. Snell, B. Craig Dickson. 1475-1478 [doi]
- Minimum-error-rate training of predictive neural network modelsKyungMin Na, JaeYeol Rheem, SouGuil Ann. 1479-1482 [doi]
- Spoken language acquisition for automated call routingAllen L. Gorin, H. Hanek, R. C. Rose, Laura G. Miller. 1483-1486 [doi]
- A speech recognition system using both auditory and afferent pathway signal processingEliathamby Ambikairajah, Owen Friel, William Millar. 1487-1490 [doi]
- Using gamma filters to model temporal dependencies in speechSteve Renals, Mike Hochberg. 1491-1494 [doi]
- Phone recognition using a transition-controlled, segment-based dp/mlp hybridJan P. Verhasselt, Jean-Pierre Martens. 1495-1498 [doi]
- Large vocabulary continuous speech recognition using a hybrid connectionist-HMM systemMike Hochberg, Steve Renals, Anthony J. Robinson, Dan J. Kershaw. 1499-1502 [doi]
- A multi-state NN/HMM hybrid method for high performance speech recognitionDong Yu, Taiyi Huang, Dao Wen Chen. 1503-1506 [doi]
- A continuous HMM based preprocessor for modular speech recognition neural networksFikret S. Gürgen, J. M. Song, R. W. King. 1507-1510 [doi]
- System integrating connectionist and ibolic approaches for spoken language understandingYing Cheng, Paul Fortier, Yves Normandin. 1511-1514 [doi]
- Recent work in hybrid neural networks and HMM systems in CSR tasksXavier Menéndez-Pidal, Javier Ferreiros, Ricardo de Córdoba, José Manuel Pardo. 1515-1518 [doi]
- Hidden Markov models and selectively trained neural networks for connected confusable word recognitionJean-François Mari, Dominique Fohr, Yolande Anglade, Jean-Claude Junqua. 1519-1522 [doi]
- Modeling dynamics in connectionist speech recognition - the time index modelYochai Konig, Nelson Morgan. 1523-1526 [doi]
- Mandarin syllables recognition by subsyllables dynamic neural networkDao Wen Chen, Xiao-Dong Li, San Zhu, Dongxin Xu, Taiyi Huang. 1527-1530 [doi]
- Evaluation of phonetic feature recognition with a time-delay neural networkShigeki Okawa, Christoph Windheuser, Frédéric Bimbot, Katsuhiko Shirai. 1531-1534 [doi]
- A self organizing feature map based on the fisher discriminantEnric Monte, Javier Hernando Pericas. 1535-1538 [doi]
- Using wavelet dyadic grids and neural networks for speech recognitionRichard R. Favero, Fikret S. Gürgen. 1539-1542 [doi]
- A normalization method of prediction error for neural networksHiroaki Hattori. 1543-1546 [doi]
- Recurrent neural network word models for small vocabulary speech recognitionPhilippe Le Cerf, Dirk Van Compernolle. 1547-1550 [doi]
- A novel fuzzy partition model architecture for classifying dynamic patternsYoshinaga Koto, Shigeru Katagiri. 1551-1554 [doi]
- Handling missing data in speech recognitionMartin Cooke, Phil D. Green, Malcolm Crawford. 1555-1558 [doi]
- A new probabilistic framework for connectionist time alignmentPatrick Haffner. 1559-1562 [doi]
- A speech recognition model using internal degrees of freedomKen-ichi Iso. 1563-1566 [doi]
- Adaptation of neural network model: comparison of multilayer perceptron and LVQDongxin Xu, Dao Wen Chen, Qian Ma, Bo Xu, Taiyi Huang. 1567-1570 [doi]
- Simplified sub-neural-networks for accurate phoneme recognitionTakuya Koizumi, Shuji Taniguchi, Ken-ichi Hattori, Mikio Mori. 1571-1574 [doi]
- A neural network for phonetically decoding the speech traceVictoria Rodellar, Victor Nieto Lluis, Pedro Gómez Vilda, Daniel Martinez, Mercedes Pérez. 1575-1578 [doi]
- Noise robust speech recognition using a dynamic-cepstrumKiyoaki Aikawa, Tsuyoshi Saito. 1579-1582 [doi]
- Telephone-band speech enhancement based on the fundamental frequency component compensationToshiyuki Aritsuka, Yoshito Nejime. 1583-1586 [doi]
- Reduction of noise level by SPAD (speech processing system by use of auto-difference function)Nobuyuki Kunieda, Tetsuya Shimamura, Jouji Suzuki, Hiroyuki Yashima. 1587-1590 [doi]
- An algorithm to reconstruct wideband speech from narrowband speech based on codebook mappingYuki Yoshida, Masanobu Abe. 1591-1594 [doi]
- An hmm-based cepstral-domain speech enhancement systemC. W. Seymour, M. Niranjan. 1595-1598 [doi]
- Voice adaptation using multi-functional transformation with weighting by radial basis function networksNaoto Iwahashi, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 1599-1602 [doi]
- A dynamic-window weighted-RMS averaging filter applied to speaker identificationHong Tang, Xiaoyuan Zhu, Iain MacLeod, J. Bruce Millar, Michael Wagner. 1603-1606 [doi]
- Quality enhancement of band limited speech by filtering and multirate techniquesHiroshi Yasukawa. 1607-1610 [doi]
- Characteristics of multi-layer perceptron models in enhancing degraded speechThanh Tung Le, John S. Mason, Tadashi Kitamura. 1611-1614 [doi]
- A time-frequency analysis technique for speech recognition signal processingAdam B. Fineberg, Kevin C. Yu. 1615-1618 [doi]
- Estimation of the glottal pulseform based on discrete all-pole modelingPaavo Alku, Erkki Vilkman. 1619-1622 [doi]
- Analysis and detection of double talk in telephone dialogsH. Nishi, M. Kitai. 1623-1626 [doi]
- A self-learning approach to transcription of danish proper namesOve Andersen, Paul Dalsgaard. 1627-1630 [doi]
- A time-varying analysis based on analytic speech signalsEisuke Horita, Yoshikazu Miyanaga, Koji Tochinai. 1631-1634 [doi]
- New spectrum interpolation method for improving quality of synthesized speechTakashi Endo, Shun ichi Yajima. 1635-1638 [doi]
- Automatic context-sensitive measurement of the acoustic correlates of distinctive features at landmarksMark Johnson. 1639-1642 [doi]
- A comparison of different acoustic and articulatory representations for the determination of place of articulation of plosivesAlain Soquet, Marco Saerens. 1643-1646 [doi]
- An analysis of voice quality using sinusoidal modelNaotoshi Osaka. 1647-1650 [doi]
- Fast formant estimation of children s speechAlan Wrench, M. M. Watson, David S. Soutar, A. Gerry Robertson, John Laver. 1651-1654 [doi]
- Some fast higher order AR estimation techniques applied to parametric wiener filteringJosep M. Salavedra, Enrique Masgrau, Asunción Moreno, Joan Estarellas, Javier Hernando. 1655-1658 [doi]
- Applications of a rule-based speech synthesizer moduleMikio Yamaguchi, Shigeharu Toyoda, Katsuhiro Yada. 1659-1662 [doi]
- Quasi-articulatory formant synthesisJon P. Iles, William H. Edmondson. 1663-1666 [doi]
- On the connection between manual segmentation conventions and errors made by automatic segmentationKnut Kvale. 1667-1670 [doi]
- Natural utterance segmentation and discourse label assignmentMutsuko Tomokiyo. 1671-1674 [doi]
- Possibility of speech synthesis by common voice sourceSatoshi Yumoto, Jouji Suzuki, Tetsuya Shimamura. 1675-1678 [doi]
- A scheme for Chinese speech synthesis by rule based on pitch-synchronous multi-pulse excitation LP methodChangfu Wang, Wenshen Yue, Keikichi Hirose, Hiroya Fujisaki. 1679-1682 [doi]
- Text processing within a speech synthesis systemAnders Lindström, Mats Ljungqvist. 1683-1686 [doi]
- E-mail to voice-mail conversion using a portuguese text-to-speech systemP. Carvalho, P. Lopes, Isabel Trancoso, Luís C. Oliveira. 1687-1690 [doi]
- Tempo estimation by wave envelope for recognition of paralinguistic features in spontaneous speechShigeyoshi Kitazawa, Satoshi Kobayashi, Takao Matsunaga, Hideya Ichikawa. 1691-1694 [doi]
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