Abstract is missing.
- A new hybrid structure of speech recognizer based on HMM and neural networkJianlai Zhou, Xiaodong He, Tiecheng Yu, Fuyuan Mo. [doi]
- Dependency modeling with bayesian networks in a voicemail transcription systemGeoffrey Zweig, Mukund Padmanabhan. [doi]
- The acquisition of a speech corpus for limited domain translationDemetrio Aiello, Loredana Cerrato, Cristina Delogu, Andrea Di Carlo. [doi]
- Czech language database of car speech and environmental noisePetr Pollák, Josef Vopièka, Pavel Sovka. [doi]
- Reinforcement learning for phoneme recognitionAkira Ichikawa, Tomoyuki Shimizu, Yasuo Horiuchi. [doi]
- Model selection in acoustic modelingS. S. Chen, Ramesh A. Gopinath. [doi]
- Laughter extracted from television closed captions as speech recognizer training dataPaul E. Kennedy, Alexander G. Hauptmann. [doi]
- Recent advances in transcribing television and radio broadcastsJean-Luc Gauvain, Lori Lamel, Gilles Adda, Michèle Jardino. [doi]
- Selection for acoustic coverage from unlimited speech extracted from closed-captioned TVPhotina Jaeyun Jang, Alexander G. Hauptmann. [doi]
- Linear transformations in sub-band groups for speech recognitionBernard Doherty, Saeed Vaseghi, Paul M. McCourt. [doi]
- Reduced gaussian mixture models in a large vocabulary continuous speech recognizerV. Fischer, T. Ross. [doi]
- Putting language into language modelingFrederick Jelinek, Ciprian Chelba. [doi]
- Path-dependent kalman estimation of a cepstral biasLionel Delphin-Poulat, Jérôme Idier. [doi]
- Tagging spoken corpusYue-Shi Lee, Hsin-Hsi Chen. [doi]
- Human speech production - an internet-based interactive multimodal tutorialKlaus Fellbaum, Joerg Richter. [doi]
- A network architecture for building applications that use speech recognition and/or synthesisDominique Vaufreydaz, José Rouillard, Mohammad Akbar. [doi]
- A generic lexicon tool for word model definition in multimodal applicationsJulie Carson-Berndsen. [doi]
- Techniques for robust speech recognition in the car environmentPhilippe Gelin, Jean-Claude Junqua. [doi]
- Automatic labeling of Japanese prosody using j-toBI style descriptionHiroaki Noguchi, Kazuhisa Kiriyama, Hiroshi Matsuda, Miki Taniguchi, Yasuharu Den, Yasuhiro Katagiri. [doi]
- Acoustic modeling based on a generalized laplacian distributionAtsushi Nakamura, Tomoko Matsui. [doi]
- Class-combined word n-gram for robust language modelingNorihiko Kobayashi, Tetsunori Kobayashi. [doi]
- Data collection in real acoustical environments for sound scene understanding and hands-free speech recognitionSatoshi Nakamura, Kazuo Hiyane, Futoshi Asano, Takeshi Yamada, Takashi Endo. [doi]
- Toward realtime transcription of broadcast newsJason Davenport, Long Nguyen, Spyros Matsoukas, Richard M. Schwartz, John Makhoul. [doi]
- Off-line acoustic modelling of non-native accentsSilke M. Witt, Steve J. Young. [doi]
- Multilinguality and human language technology coursewareBojan Petek. [doi]
- Automatic verification of broadcast news transcriptionsMichael Pitz, Sirko Molau. [doi]
- Phrase-based language models for speech recognitionHong-Kwang Jeff Kuo, Wolfgang Reichl. [doi]
- A multimodal database of gestures and speechSatoru Hayamizu, Shigeki Nagaya, Keiko Watanuki, Masayuki Nakazawa, Shuichi Nobe, Takashi Yoshimura. [doi]
- Compiling multi-tiered speech databases into the relational model: experiments with the emu systemSteve Cassidy. [doi]
- Building speech databases for cellular networksEric Sanders, Henk van den Heuvel, Khalid Choukri. [doi]
- Two Swedish Speechdat databases - some experiences and resultsKjell Elenius. [doi]
- The speechdat-car multilingual speech databases for in-car applications: some first validation resultsHenk van den Heuvel, Jérôme Boudy, Robrecht Comeyne, Stephan Euler, Asunción Moreno, Gaël Richard. [doi]
- A public domain speech-to-text systemM. Ordowski, Neeraj Deshmukh, Aravind Ganapathiraju, Jonathan Hamaker, Joseph Picone. [doi]
- Unified framework for acoustic topology modelling: ML-SSS and question-based decision treesHarald Singer, Atsushi Nakamura. [doi]
- Experiments in constrained maximum likelihood extraction of temporal features for speech recognitionGilles Boulianne, Julie Brousseau, Nathalie Talbot, Pierre Dumouchel. [doi]
- Using partial morphological analysis in language modeling estimation for large vocabulary portuguese speech recognitionCiro Martins, João Paulo Neto, Luís B. Almeida. [doi]
- The controversial connection between speech production and perception: theories vs. factsMária Gósy. [doi]
- New WWW browser for visually impaired people using interactive voice technologyYasuo Horiuchi, Fujiwara Atsushi, Akira Ichikawa. [doi]
- A hungarian child database for speech processing applicationsF. Csatári, Zsolt Bakcsi, Klára Vicsi. [doi]
- Optimization of dynamic regimes in a statistical hidden dynamic model for conversational speech recognitionJeff Z. Ma, Li Deng. [doi]
- Speech/music discrimination based on posterior probability featuresGethin Williams, Daniel P. W. Ellis. [doi]
- High accuracy acoustic modeling based on multi-stage decision treeDongHwa Kim, Chaojun Liu, Xintian Wu, YongHong Yan. [doi]
- Acoustical modelling of phone transitions: biphones and diphones - what are the differences?Simon Dobrisek, France Mihelic, Nikola Pavesic. [doi]
- Top-down bottom-up hybrid clustering algorithm for acoustic-phonetic modeling of speechJosé B. Mariño, Albino Nogueiras Rodriguez. [doi]
- How speech works - questions and preliminary answersBjörn Lindblom. [doi]
- Improved speaker segmentation and segments clustering using the bayesian information criterionAlain Tritschler, Ramesh A. Gopinath. [doi]
- A hybrid ANN/HMM syllable recognition module based on vowel spottingJohn Sirigos, Nikos Fakotakis, George Kokkinakis. [doi]
- Recognition performance of a structured language modelCiprian Chelba, Frederick Jelinek. [doi]
- Development of the 1998 OGI-FONIX broadcast news transcription systemXintian Wu, YongHong Yan. [doi]
- Syntax-based speech recognition: how a syntactic parser can help a recognition systemArnaud Gaudinat, Jean Philippe Goldman, Eric Wehrli. [doi]
- Recent advances in Japanese broadcast news transcriptionKatsutoshi Ohtsuki, Sadaoki Furui, Naoyuki Sakurai, Atsushi Iwasaki, Zhipeng Zhang. [doi]
- Diphone subspace models for phone-based HMM complementationKlaus Reinhard, Mahesan Niranjan. [doi]
- Research on speech units modeling in continuous speech recognitionXiaodong He, Jian Liu, Jianlai Zhou, Tiecheng Yu. [doi]
- Acoustic modeling and language modeling for cantonese LVCSRYiu Wing Wong, K. F. Chow, Wai H. Lau, Wai Kit Lo, Tan Lee, P. C. Ching. [doi]
- Hybrid connectionist-structural acoustical modeling in the ATROS systemM. J. Castro, Francisco Casacuberta. [doi]
- Multimodal information seeking dialogues on the world wide webJosé Rouillard, Jean Caelen. [doi]
- Phoneme recognition system based on HMM with distributed VQ codebookMohamed Debyeche, Mohamed Afify, Jean-Paul Haton. [doi]
- An investigation of cepstral parameterisations for large vocabulary speech recognitionReinhold Haeb-Umbach, Marco Loog. [doi]
- Further advances in transcription of broadcast newsLong Nguyen, Spyros Matsoukas, Jason Davenport, Daben Liu, Jay Billa, Francis Kubala, John Makhoul. [doi]
- Combined temporal and spectral multi-resolution phonetic modellingPaul M. McCourt, Naomi Harte, Saeed Vaseghi. [doi]
- Accuracy versus complexity in context dependent phone modelingWei Xu, Jacques Duchateau, Kris Demuynck, Ioannis Dologlou, Patrick Wambacq, Dirk Van Compernolle, Hugo Van Hamme. [doi]
- Progress in automatic meeting transcriptionHua Yu, Michael Finke, Alex Waibel. [doi]
- Context dependent hybrid HMM/ANN systems for large vocabulary continuous speech recognition systemOlivier Deroo, Christophe Ris, Stéphane Dupont. [doi]
- Dragon systems 1998 broadcast news transcription systemSteven Wegmann, Puming Zhan, Ira Carp, Michael Newman, Jon Yamron, Larry Gillick. [doi]
- Japanese spontaneous speech database with wide regional and age distributionTomoko Matsui, Masaki Naito, Harald Singer, Atsushi Nakamura, Yoshinori Sagisaka. [doi]
- Mixture trees - hierarchically tied mixture densities for modeling HMM emission probabilitiesJ. Fritsch. [doi]
- Language model selection based on the analysis of Japanese spontaneous speech on travel arrangement taskAkira Kurematsu, Atsushi Sukenori. [doi]
- Discriminative training of language model classifiersUwe Ohler, Stefan Harbeck, Heinrich Niemann. [doi]
- On the use of right context in sense-disambiguating language modelsVincent Chow, Dekai Wu. [doi]
- Integration of several information sources for robust class-based statistical language modellingGéraldine Damnati. [doi]
- A welsh speech database: preliminary resultsBriony Williams. [doi]
- Dynamic HMM selection for continuous speech recognitionThomas Hain, Philip C. Woodland. [doi]
- Speed improvement of the time-asynchronous acoustic fast matchMiroslav Novak, Michael Picheny. [doi]
- Unified decoding and feature representation for improved speech recognitionLi Jiang, Xuedong Huang. [doi]
- Language modeling based on automatic word concatenationsChristel Beaujard, Michèle Jardino. [doi]
- Language modelling with hierarchical domainsPaul G. Donnelly, F. Jack Smith, Elvira I. Sicilia-Garcia, Ji Ming. [doi]
- Optimal feature sub-space selection based on discriminant analysisKris Demuynck, Jacques Duchateau, Dirk Van Compernolle. [doi]
- Multimedia interaction for the new millenniumMark T. Maybury. [doi]
- Semi-supervised adaptation of acoustic models for large-volume dictationColin W. Wightman, Ted A. Harder. [doi]
- Efficient language model adaptation through MDI estimationMarcello Federico. [doi]
- Compression of acoustic features - are perceptual quality and recognition performance incompatible goals?Roger Tucker, Tony Robinson, James Christie. [doi]
- Improving n-gram modeling using distance-related unit association maximum entropy language modelingShuwu Zhang, Harald Singer, Dekai Wu, Yoshinori Sagisaka. [doi]
- The philips/RWTH system for transcription of broadcast newsPeter Beyerlein, Xavier L. Aubert, Reinhold Haeb-Umbach, Matthew Harris, Dietrich Klakow, Andreas Wendemuth, Sirko Molau, Michael Pitz, Achim Sixtus. [doi]
- A prototype of Mandarin speech telephone number inquiry systemPeng-Ren Lu, Wei-Tyng Hong, Sheng-Lun Chiang, Yih-Ru Wang, Sin-Horng Chen. [doi]
- New resources at BAS: acoustic, multimodal, linguisticFlorian Schiel, Christoph Draxler, Phil Hoole, Hans G. Tillmann. [doi]
- Text to speech control protocolJirí Hanika, Petr Horák. [doi]
- Terminology principles and support for spoken language system developmentDafydd Gibbon, Silke Kölsch, Inge Mertins, Michaela Schulte, Thorsten Trippel. [doi]
- Data-driven modulation filter design under adverse acoustic conditions and using phonetic and syllabic unitsMichael L. Shire. [doi]
- A new metric for stochastic language model evaluationAkinori Ito, Masaki Kohda, Mari Ostendorf. [doi]
- Maximum a posterior linear regression with elliptically symmetric matrix variate priorsWu Chou. 1-4 [doi]
- A MAP-like weighting scheme for MLLR speaker adaptationSilke Goronzy, Ralf Kompe. 5-8 [doi]
- HMM adaptation for telephone applicationsHans-Gnter Hirsch. 9-12 [doi]
- A study of adaptation techniques on a voicemail transcription taskJing Huang, Mukund Padmanabhan. 13-16 [doi]
- Maximum likelihood sequential adaptationBeth Logan. 17-20 [doi]
- The relationship between utterance type and F0 contour in GermanCaren Brinckmann, Ralf Benzmüller. 21-24 [doi]
- A contrastive investigation of discourse intonational characteristic features of sofia bulgarian and hamburg German in MAP task dialoguesEvelina Grigorova, Vladimir Filipov, Bistra Andreeva. 25-28 [doi]
- Prosodic correlates of information structure in Swedish human-human dialoguesMerle Horne, Petra Hansson, Gösta Bruce, Johan Frid. 29-32 [doi]
- Paralinguistic features as suprasegmental acoustics observed in natural Japanese dialogueS. Kitazawa, S. Kobayashi. 33-36 [doi]
- Integrating prosodic features in dialogue understandingMasafumi Tamoto, Masahito Kawamori, Takeshi Kawabata. 37-40 [doi]
- A high-level approach to confidence estimation in speech recognitionStephen Cox, Srinandan Dasmahapatra. 41-44 [doi]
- Utterance verification using modified segmental probability modelBin Jia, Xiaoyan Zhu, Yupin Luo, Dongcheng Hu. 45-48 [doi]
- OOV-detection in large vocabulary system using automatically defined word-fragments as fillersDietrich Klakow, Georg Rose, Xavier L. Aubert. 49-52 [doi]
- Use of recursive mumble models for confidence measuringQiguang Lin, David Lubensky, Salim Roukos. 53-56 [doi]
- Utterance verification for the numeric language in a natural spoken dialogueMazin G. Rahim. 57-60 [doi]
- Robust energy normalization using speech/nonspeech discriminator for German connected digit recognitionRathinavelu Chengalvarayan. 61-64 [doi]
- Acoustic pre-processing for optimal effectivity of missing feature theoryJohan de Veth, Bert Cranen, Febe de Wet, Lou Boves. 65-68 [doi]
- Simultaneous recognition of multiple sound sources based on 3-d n-best search using microphone arrayPanikos Heracleous, Takeshi Yamada, Satoshi Nakamura, Kiyohiro Shikano. 69-72 [doi]
- Down-sampling speech representation in ASRHynek Hermansky, Pratibha Jain. 73-76 [doi]
- Comparison of time & frequency filtering and cepstral-time matrix approaches in ASRDusan Macho, Climent Nadeu, Peter Jancovic, Gregor Rozinaj, Javier Hernando. 77-80 [doi]
- Syllable onset detection applied to the portuguese languageHugo Meinedo, João Paulo Neto, Luís B. Almeida. 81-84 [doi]
- Decorrelated and liftered filter-bank energies for robust speech recognitionKuldip K. Paliwal. 85-88 [doi]
- Optimization algorithms for estimating modulation spectrum domain filtersPau Pachès-Leal, Richard C. Rose, Climent Nadeu. 89-92 [doi]
- Efficient vector quantization using an n-path binary tree search algorithmRubén San Segundo, Ricardo de Córdoba, Javier Ferreiros, Ascensión Gallardo-Antolín, José Colás, Julio Pastor, Y. López. 93-96 [doi]
- Neural network based optimal feature extraction for ASRNarada D. Warakagoda, Magne Hallstein Johnsen. 97-100 [doi]
- A study of speech recognition for the elderlyFumihiro Yato, Naomi Inoue, Kazuo Hashimoto. 101-104 [doi]
- The analysis and application of a new endpoint detection method based on distance of autocorrelated similarity:::#:::Jie Zhu, Feili Chen. 105-108 [doi]
- Hyper-articulated speech: auditory and visual intelligibilityDenis Beautemps, Pascal Borel, Sébastien Manolios. 109-112 [doi]
- Modeling of the vocal tract in three dimensionsOlov Engwall. 113-116 [doi]
- Articulatory reduction in emotional speechMiriam Kienast, Astrid Paeschke, Walter F. Sendlmeier. 117-120 [doi]
- A trajectory formation model of articulatory movements using a multidimensional phonemic taskTokihiko Kaburagi, Masaaki Honda, Takeshi Okadome. 121-124 [doi]
- LPC-based inversion of the DRM articulatory modelSacha Krstulovic. 125-128 [doi]
- A vocal tract model using multi-line equivalent circuitsNobuhiro Miki, Thoru Yokoyama, Takeshi Ohtani, Shinobu Masaki, Ikuhiro Shimada, Ichiro Fujimoto, Yuji Nakamura. 129-132 [doi]
- Acoustic nature of the whisperMasahiro Matsuda, Hideki Kasuya. 133-136 [doi]
- Relations between utterance speed and articulatory movementsTakeshi Okadome, Tokihiko Kaburagi, Masaaki Honda. 137-140 [doi]
- Design of hypercube codebooks for the acoustic-to-articulatory inversion respecting the non-linearities of the articulatory-to-acoustic mappingSlim Ouni, Yves Laprie. 141-144 [doi]
- A missing-word test comparison of human and statistical language model performanceMarie Owens, Anja Krger, Paul Donnelly, F. Jack Smith, Ji Ming. 145-148 [doi]
- Estimating velum height from acoustics during continuous speechKorin Richmond. 149-152 [doi]
- On improving the decision algorithm for articulatory codebook searchCarlos Silva, Samir Chennoukh, Isabel Trancoso. 153-156 [doi]
- Extraction of articulators in x-ray image sequencesG. Thimm, Juergen Luettin. 157-160 [doi]
- Effects of source-tract interaction in perception of nasalityAntónio J. S. Teixeira, Francisco A. C. Vaz, José Carlos Príncipe. 161-164 [doi]
- Perceiving anticipatory phonetic gestures in FrenchBéatrice Vaxelaire, Rudolph Sock, Véronique Hecker. 165-168 [doi]
- Motor equivalence evidenced by articulatory modellingAnne Vilain, Christian Abry, Pierre Badin. 169-172 [doi]
- Using likelihood ratios to perform utterance verification in automatic pronunciation assessmentFebe de Wet, Catia Cucchiarini, Helmer Strik, Lou Boves. 173-176 [doi]
- A system for learning the pronunciation of Japanese pitch accentGoh Kawai, Carlos Toshinori Ishi. 177-182 [doi]
- Computer-aided spoken-language training with enhanced visual and auditory feedbackJan Nouza. 183-186 [doi]
- An effective scoring method for speaking skill evaluation systemZhanjiang Song, Fang Zheng, Mingxing Xu, Wenhu Wu. 187-190 [doi]
- On deriving rules for nativised pronunciation in navigation queriesIsabel Trancoso, Céu Viana, Isabel Mascarenhas, Carlos Teixeira. 195-198 [doi]
- Pronouncing unknown words using multi-dimensional analogiesFrançois Yvon. 199-202 [doi]
- Discounted likelihood linear regression for rapid adaptationWilliam Byrne, Asela Gunawardana. 203-206 [doi]
- Extraction of reliable transformation parameters for unsupervised speaker adaptationJen-Tzung Chien, Jean-Claude Junqua, Philippe Gelin. 207-210 [doi]
- Maximum a posteriori linear regression for hidden Markov model adaptationCristina Chesta, Olivier Siohan, Chin-Hui Lee. 211-214 [doi]
- On combining vocal tract length normalisation and speaker adaptation for noise robust speech recognitionRamalingam Hariharan, Olli Viikki. 215-218 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation using regularization and network adaptation for hybrid MMI-NN/HMM speech recognitionJörg Rottland, Christoph Neukirchen, Daniel Willett, Gerhard Rigoll. 219-222 [doi]
- Prosodic phrasing and accentuation in speech production of patients with right hemisphere lesionsKai Alter, Annett Schirmer, Sonja A. Kotz, Angela D. Friederici. 223-226 [doi]
- A real-time filled pause detection system for spontaneous speech recognitionMasataka Goto, Katunobu Itou, Satoru Hayamizu. 227-230 [doi]
- Prosodic word boundary detection using mora transition modeling of fundamental frequency contours -speaker independent experiments-Koji Iwano. 231-234 [doi]
- Integrating multiple knowledge sources for word hypotheses graph interpretationVolker Warnke, Florian Gallwitz, Anton Batliner, Jan Buckow, Richard Huber, Elmar Nöth, A. Höthker. 235-238 [doi]
- Prosodic correlates of interruptions in spoken dialogueLi-chiung Yang. 239-242 [doi]
- Dialog analysis in the carnegie mellon communicatorPaul C. Constantinides, Alexander I. Rudnicky. 243-246 [doi]
- NIST s 1998 topic detection and tracking evaluation (TDT2)Jonathan G. Fiscus, George R. Doddington, John S. Garofolo, Alvin F. Martin. 247-250 [doi]
- Comparative evaluation of six German TTS systemsGerit P. Sonntag, Thomas Portele, Felicitas Haas, Joachim Köhler. 251-254 [doi]
- Standardisation of ergonomic assessment of speech communicationHerman J. M. Steeneken. 255-258 [doi]
- Evaluation of affiliation in interaction with autonomous creaturesNoriko Suzuki, Yugo Takeuchi, Kazuo Ishii, Michio Okada. 259-262 [doi]
- Accurate recognition of city names with spelling as a fall back strategyJosef G. Bauer, Jochen Junkawitsch. 263-266 [doi]
- Selective prosodic post-processing for improving recognition of French telephone numbersKatarina Bartkova, Denis Jouvet. 267-270 [doi]
- Improving rejection with semantic slot-based confidence scoresEric I. Chang. 271-274 [doi]
- The IBM conversational telephony system for financial applicationsK. Davies, R. Donovan, Mark Epstein, Martin Franz, Abraham Ittycheriah, Ea-Ee Jan, J. M. LeRoux, David Lubensky, Chalapathy Neti, Mukund Padmanabhan, Kishore Papineni, Salim Roukos, Andrej Sakrajda, Jeffrey S. Sorensen, Borivoj Tydlitát, Todd Ward. 275-278 [doi]
- Error spotting using syllabic fillers in spontaneous conversational speech recognitionRachida El Méliani, Douglas D. O Shaughnessy. 279-282 [doi]
- Recognition of spelled names over the telephone and rejection of data out of the spelling lexiconDenis Jouvet, Jean Monné. 283-286 [doi]
- An utterance verification system based on subword modeling for a vocabulary independent speech recognition systemMyoung-Wan Koo, Sun-Jeong Lee. 287-290 [doi]
- Use of a confidence measure based on frame level likelihood ratios for the rejection of incorrect dataNicolas Moreau, Denis Jouvet. 291-294 [doi]
- Variable preselection list length estimation using neural networks in a telephone speech hypothesis-verification systemJavier Macías Guarasa, Javier Ferreiros, Ascensión Gallardo-Antolín, Rubén San Segundo, Juan Manuel Pardo, Luis Villarrubia Grande. 295-298 [doi]
- Speaker normalization and pronunciation variant modeling: helpful methods for improving recognition of fast speechThilo Pfau, Robert Faltlhauser, Günther Ruske. 299-302 [doi]
- Automatic speech recognition using acoustic confidence conditioned language modelsRichard C. Rose, Giuseppe Riccardi. 303-306 [doi]
- Utilizing prosody for unconstrained morpheme recognitionVolker Strom, Henrik Heine. 307-310 [doi]
- Modeling the prosody of hidden events for improved word recognitionAndreas Stolcke, Elizabeth Shriberg, Dilek Z. Hakkani-Tür, Gökhan Tür. 311-314 [doi]
- A comparison of word graph and n-best list based confidence measuresFrank Wessel, Klaus Macherey, Hermann Ney. 315-318 [doi]
- C++ software environment for speech signal processingMarcus M. Prätzas, Ulrich Balss, Herbert Reininger, Harald Wüst. 319-322 [doi]
- Improvement of electrolaryngeal speech by introducing normal excitation informationKun Ma, Pelin Demirel, Carol Y. Espy-Wilson, Joel MacAuslan. 323-326 [doi]
- Detecting user speech in barge-in over prompts using speaker identification methodsAbraham Ittycheriah, Richard J. Mammone. 327-330 [doi]
- Speaker and channel-normalized set of formant parameters for telephone speech recognitionBoris Lobanov, T. Levkovskaya, Igor E. Kheidorov. 331-334 [doi]
- Fuzzy segmentation of lip image using cluster analysisAlan Wee-Chung Liew, K. L. Sum, S. H. Leung, Wai H. Lau. 335-338 [doi]
- Software to support research and development of spoken dialogue systemsMichael F. McTear. 339-342 [doi]
- Analysis of sources of variability in speechSachin S. Kajarekar, Narendranath Malayath, Hynek Hermansky. 343-346 [doi]
- Adaptive nonlinear prediction based on order statistics for speech signalsTetsuya Shimamura, Haruko Hayakawa. 347-350 [doi]
- Developing a voiced information retrieval system for the portuguese language capable to handle both brazilian and portuguese spoken versionsMárcio N. de Souza, E. J. Caprini, Glaucio J. Couri Machado, M. V. Ludolf, Luiz Pereira Calôba, José Manoel de Seixas, Fernando Gil Resende, Sergio L. Netto, Diamantino Rui da Silva Freitas, João Paulo Teixeira, Carlos Espain, Vitor Pera, F. Moreira. 351-354 [doi]
- Real-time speech modeling using computationally efficient locally recurrent neural networks (CERNs)John J. Soraghan, Amir Hussain, Ivy Shim. 355-358 [doi]
- Effectiveness of KL-transformation in spectral delta expansionM. Tokuhira, Y. Ariki. 359-362 [doi]
- Evaluation of confidence measures for language identificationKay Berkling, Douglas A. Reynolds, Marc A. Zissman. 363-366 [doi]
- Chinese dialect identification using an acoustic-phonotactic modelWuei-He Tsai, Wen-Whei Chang. 367-370 [doi]
- Language identification from prosody without explicit featuresFred A. Cummins, Felix A. Gers, Jürgen Schmidhuber. 371-374 [doi]
- Multigrams for language identificationStefan Harbeck, Uwe Ohler. 375-378 [doi]
- The use of rare segments for language identificationJean-Marie Hombert, Ian Maddieson. 379-382 [doi]
- Spoken language identification utilizing fundamental frequency and cepstraShuichi Itahashi, Toshikazu Kiuchi, Mikio Yamamoto. 383-386 [doi]
- Comparing different model configurations for language identification using a phonotactic approachDriss Matrouf, Martine Adda-Decker, Jean-Luc Gauvain, Lori Lamel. 387-390 [doi]
- Human language identification with reduced spectral informationK. Mori, N. Toba, T. Harada, Takayuki Arai, Masahiko Komatsu, Makiko Aoyagi, Yuji Murahara. 391-394 [doi]
- Prosody as a distinctive feature for the discrimination of arabic dialectsMelissa Barkat, John Ohala, François Pellegrino. 395-398 [doi]
- Comparison of two phonetic approaches to language identificationFrançois Pellegrino, Jérôme Farinas, Régine André-Obrecht. 399-402 [doi]
- The effects of speaker training on ASR accuracyStephen Anderson, Natalie Liberman, Larry Gillick, Stephen Foster, Sahoko Hama. 403-406 [doi]
- Creating hidden Markov models for fast speech by optimized clusteringRobert Faltlhauser, Thilo Pfau, Günther Ruske. 407-410 [doi]
- Improvements on speech recognition for fast talkersM. Richardson, M. Hwang, Alex Acero, Xuedong Huang. 411-414 [doi]
- Modeling the rate of speech by Markov processes on curvesLawrence K. Saul, Mazin G. Rahim. 415-418 [doi]
- Modelling speaking rate using a between frame distance metricAndreas Tuerk, Steve Young. 419-422 [doi]
- Vocal registers revisitedGerrit Bloothooft, Peter Pabon. 423-426 [doi]
- Pseudo affine projection algorithm new solution for adaptive identicationFranck Bouteille, Pascal Scalart, Michel Corazza. 427-430 [doi]
- Acoustic analysis of a speech corpus of european portuguese fricative consonantsLuis M. T. Jesus, Christine H. Shadle. 431-434 [doi]
- Effects of stress and lexical structure on speech efficiencyR. J. J. H. van Son, Louis C. W. Pols. 439-442 [doi]
- A two-stage speech recognition method with an error correction modelYoshiharu Abe, Hiroyasu Itsui, Yuzo Maruta, Kunio Nakajima. 443-446 [doi]
- Speech recognition with automatic punctuationC. Julian Chen. 447-450 [doi]
- Automatic modeling of pronunciation variationsEllen Eide. 451-454 [doi]
- Reducing search complexity in low perplexity tasksMartin Franz, Miroslav Novak. 455-458 [doi]
- A two-stage speech recognition method for information retrieval applicationsPaolo Coletti, Marcello Federico. 459-462 [doi]
- Multi-level decision trees for static and dynamic pronunciation modelsEric Fosler-Lussier. 463-466 [doi]
- Modeling and efficient decoding of large vocabulary conversational speechMichael Finke, Jürgen Fritsch, Detlef Koll, Alex Waibel. 467-470 [doi]
- Evaluation of a segmentation system based on multi-level latticesJean-Luc Husson. 471-474 [doi]
- The application of an improved DP match for automatic lexicon generationPhilip Hanna, Darryl Stewart, Ji Ming. 475-478 [doi]
- Modeling trajectories in the HMM frameworkRukmini Iyer, Owen Kimball, Herbert Gish. 479-482 [doi]
- Korean large vocabulary continuous speech recognition using pseudomorpheme unitsOh-Wook Kwon, Kyuwoong Hwang, Jun Park. 483-486 [doi]
- Navigating German cities by spontaneous French queriesHarouna Kabré, Alexander Waibel. 487-490 [doi]
- Generating alternative pronunciations from a dictionaryFilipp Korkmazskiy, Chin-Hui Lee. 491-494 [doi]
- Finding consensus among words: lattice-based word error minimizationLidia Mangu, Eric Brill, Andreas Stolcke. 495-498 [doi]
- An efficient decoding method for real time speech recognitionStefan Ortmanns, Wolfgang Reichl, Wu Chou. 499-502 [doi]
- Recent improvements in voicemail transcriptionMukund Padmanabhan, George Saon, Sankar Basu, Jing Huang, Geoffrey Zweig. 503-506 [doi]
- Acoustics-based baseform generation with pronunciation and/or phonotactic modelsBhuvana Ramabhadran, Sabine Deligne, Abraham Ittycheriah. 507-510 [doi]
- Improving recognition correct rate of important words in large vocabulary speech recognitionYasuo Shirosaki, Hideaki Kikuchi, Katsuhiko Shirai. 511-514 [doi]
- Pronunciation modeling by sharing gaussian densities across phonetic modelsMurat Saraclar, Harriet J. Nock, Sanjeev Khudanpur. 515-518 [doi]
- Automatic annotation and classification of phrase accents in spontaneous speechAnton Batliner, M. Nutt, Volker Warnke, Elmar Nöth, Jan Buckow, Richard Huber, Heinrich Niemann. 519-522 [doi]
- Prosody recognition from speech utterances using acoustic and linguistic based models of prosodic eventsAlistair Conkie, Giuseppe Riccardi, Richard C. Rose. 523-526 [doi]
- A comparison between syntactic and prosodic phrasingMarcus L. Fach. 527-530 [doi]
- The prosody of left-dislocated topic constituents in italian read speechBarbara Gili Fivela. 531-534 [doi]
- Semantic boundaries in multiple languagesJürgen Haas, Volker Warnke, Heinrich Niemann, Mauro Cettolo, Anna Corazza, Daniele Falavigna, Gianni Lazzari. 535-538 [doi]
- Prosodic phrasing in korean, determine governor, and then split or notYeon-Jun Kim, Heo-Jin Byeon, Yung-Hwan Oh. 539-542 [doi]
- Linear prediction coding of individual pitch accent shapesJoachim Mersdorf, Kai U. Schmidt, Stefanie Köster. 543-546 [doi]
- Prominence variation beyond given/newChristine H. Nakatani. 547-550 [doi]
- Acoustical features as predictors for prominence in read aloud dutch sentences used in ANN sBarbertje M. Streefkerk, Louis C. W. Pols, Louis ten Bosch. 551-554 [doi]
- Parallelism, coherence, and contrastive accentMariët Theune. 555-558 [doi]
- A phonetically-guided diagnosis of auditory deficiency based on synthetic speech stimuliAnne Bonneau, Parham Mokhtari. 559-562 [doi]
- On the selection of meaningful speech parameters used by a pathologic/non pathologic voice register classifierJuan Ignacio Godino-Llorente, Santiago Aguilera-Navarro, Carlos Hernández-Espinosa, Mercedes Fernández-Redondo, Pedro Gómez Vilda. 563-566 [doi]
- On-line captioning of TV-programs for the hearing impairedErik Harborg, Trym Holter, Magne Hallstein Johnsen, Torbjørn Svendsen. 567-570 [doi]
- Classification of pathological voice into normal/benign/malignant stateCheol-Woo Jo, Dae-Hyun Kim. 571-574 [doi]
- Cognitive experiments on timing lag for superimposing closed captionsIchiro Maruyama, Yoshiharu Abe, Eiji Sawamura, Tetsuo Mitsuhashi, Terumasa Ehara, Katsuhiko Shirai. 575-578 [doi]
- Speaker normalization for audio-visual articulation trainingMarcel Ogner, Zdravko Kacic. 579-582 [doi]
- Towards a global optimization scheme for multi-band speech recognitionChristophe Cerisara, Jean-Paul Haton, Dominique Fohr. 587-590 [doi]
- Multi-stream speech recognition: ready for prime time?Adam Janin, Dan Ellis, Nelson Morgan. 591-594 [doi]
- Sooner or later: exploring asynchrony in multi-band speech recognitionNikki Mirghafori, Nelson Morgan. 595-598 [doi]
- The full combination sub-bands approach to noise robust HMM/ANN based ASRAndrew C. Morris, Astrid Hagen, Hervé Bourlard. 599-602 [doi]
- A recombination strategy for multi-band speech recognition based on mutual information criterionShigeki Okawa, Takehiro Nakajima, Katsuhiko Shirai. 603-606 [doi]
- Rapid unit selection from a large speech corpus for concatenative speech synthesisMark Beutnagel, Mehryar Mohri, Michael Riley. 607-610 [doi]
- Objective distance measures for assessing concatenative speech synthesisJing-Dong Chen, Nick Campbell. 611-614 [doi]
- Word and syllable concatenation in text-to-speech synthesisEric Lewis, Mark Tatham. 615-618 [doi]
- Synthesis by word concatenationKarlheinz Stöber, Thomas Portele, Petra Wagner, Wolfgang Hess. 619-622 [doi]
- Speech synthesis by phonological structure matchingPaul Taylor, Alan W. Black. 623-626 [doi]
- The implementation of a european masters in language and speechGerrit Bloothooft. 627-630 [doi]
- The interactive auditory demonstrations projectMartin Cooke, Helen Parker, Guy J. Brown, Stuart N. Wrigley. 631-634 [doi]
- Curricula and courseware in spoken language engineering in europe: a critical appraisalMichael F. McTear. 635-638 [doi]
- An interactive tutorial on text-to-speech synthesis from diphones in time domainRüdiger Hoffmann, Bettina Ketzmerick, Ulrich Kordon, Steffen Krbis. 639-642 [doi]
- Evaluating the dialogue component in the GULAN educational systemPernilla Qvarfordt, Arne Jönsson. 643-646 [doi]
- A comparative study of HMM-based approaches for the automatic recognition of perceptually relevant aspects of spontaneous German speech melodyChristel Brindöpke, Gernot A. Fink, Franz Kummert. 699-710 [doi]
- Modelling intonational phrase structure with artificial neural networksGrazyna Demenko, Wiktor Jassem. 711-714 [doi]
- Effects of articulation rate on duration in read French speechDanielle Duez. 715-718 [doi]
- A semi automatic method for the characterization of Spanish intonation contoursJorge A. Gurlekian, Marcela Leticia Riccillo, Alejandro Renato, Jose Alvarez. 719-722 [doi]
- Towards recognizing non-lexical words in spontaneous conversational speechHesham Tolba, Douglas D. O Shaughnessy. 723-726 [doi]
- A new F0 contour control method based on vector representation of F0 contourMitsuaki Isogai, Hideyuki Mizuno. 727-730 [doi]
- Developing the database of the spontaneous speech prosody characteristicsJana Klecková. 731-734 [doi]
- A method for the analysis of prosodic registersGregor Möhler, Jörg Mayer. 735-738 [doi]
- Prosodic modeling of Mandarin speech and its application to lexical decodingWern-Jun Wang, Yuan-Fu Liao, Sin-Horng Chen. 743-746 [doi]
- Modeling carryover and anticipation effects for Chinese tone recognitionJin-Song Zhang, Hiromichi Kawanami. 747-750 [doi]
- Experimental evaluation of text-independent speaker verification on laboratory and field test databases in the M2VTS projectLaurent Besacier, Juergen Luettin, Gilbert Maître, Eric Meurville. 751-754 [doi]
- Channel estimation and normalization by coherent spectral averaging for robust speaker verificationRajesh Balchandran, Vidhya Ramanujam, Richard J. Mammone. 755-758 [doi]
- Time-frequency principal components of speech: application to speaker identificationIvan Magrin-Chagnolleau, Geoffrey Durou. 759-762 [doi]
- Speaker recognition by means of a combination of linear and nonlinear predictive modelsMarcos Faúndez-Zanuy. 763-766 [doi]
- Feature vector transformation using independent component analysis and its application to speaker identificationGil-Jin Jang, Seong-Jin Yun, Yung-Hwan Oh. 767-770 [doi]
- The prototype model in speaker identificationYizhar Lavner, Judith Rosenhouse, Isak Gath. 771-774 [doi]
- A new cepstrum-based channel compensation method for speaker verificationT. F. Lo, Man-Wai Mak, Kwok-Kwong Yiu. 775-778 [doi]
- Speaker recognition based on discriminative feature extraction - optimization of mel-cepstral features using second-order all-pass warping functionChiyomi Miyajima, Hideyuki Watanabe, Tadashi Kitamura, Shigeru Katagiri. 779-782 [doi]
- Facing severe channel variability in forensic speaker verification conditionsJavier Ortega-Garcia, Santiago Cruz-Llanas, Joaquin Gonzalez-Rodriguez. 783-786 [doi]
- Speaker and language recognition using speech codec parametersThomas F. Quatieri, Elliot Singer, Robert B. Dunn, Douglas A. Reynolds, Joseph P. Campbell. 787-790 [doi]
- Robust speaker verification in noisy conditions by modification of spectral time trajectoriesVidhya Ramanujam, Rajesh Balchandran, Richard J. Mammone. 791-794 [doi]
- Toward parametric representation of speech for speaker recognition systemsRivarol Vergin, Douglas D. O Shaughnessy, Pierre Dumouchel. 795-798 [doi]
- Text independent speaker identification using LSP codebook speaker models and linear discriminant functionsRan D. Zilca, Yuval Bistritz. 799-802 [doi]
- Development of the philips 1999 taiwan Mandarin benchmark systemChiwei Che, Nick Wang, Max Huang, Hank Huang, Frank Seide. 803-806 [doi]
- The AT&t large vocabulary conversational speech recognition systemAndrej Ljolje, Michael D. Riley, Donald Hindle. 807-810 [doi]
- Integrated context-dependent networks in very large vocabulary speech recognitionMehryar Mohri, Michael Riley. 811-814 [doi]
- Mandarin large vocabulary speech recognition using the globalphone databaseJürgen Reichert, Tanja Schultz, Alex Waibel. 815-818 [doi]
- Easytalk: a large-vocabulary speaker-independent Chinese dictation machineFang Zheng, Zhanjiang Song, Mingxing Xu, Jian Wu, Yinfei Huang, Wenhu Wu, Cheng Bi. 819-822 [doi]
- Synthesis of regional English using a keyword lexiconSusan Fitt, Stephen Isard. 823-826 [doi]
- Speaker conversion through non-linear frequency warping of straight spectrumNoriyasu Maeda, Hideki Banno, Shoji Kajita, Kazuya Takeda, Fumitada Itakura. 827-830 [doi]
- User attitudes to concatenated natural speech and text-to-speech synthesis in an automated information serviceFergus R. McInnes, David Attwater, Michael D. Edgington, Mark S. Schmidt, Mervyn A. Jack. 831-834 [doi]
- From multilingual to polyglot speech synthesisChristof Traber, Karl Huber, Karim Nedir, Beat Pfister, Eric Keller, Brigitte Zellner. 835-838 [doi]
- A Japanese text-to-speech system based on multi-form units with consideration of frequency distribution in JapaneseKimihito Tanaka, Hideyuki Mizuno, Masanobu Abe, Shin ya Nakajima. 839-842 [doi]
- Automatic detection and correction of pronunciation errors for foreign language learners: the demosthenes applicationG. Deville, Olivier Deroo, Henri Leich, Stan C. A. M. Gielen, Johan Vanparys. 843-846 [doi]
- User adaptation in the fluency pronunciation trainerMaxine Eskenazi, Scott Hansma, John Corwin, Jordi Albornoz. 847-850 [doi]
- Automatic detection of phone-level mispronunciation for language learningHoracio Franco, Leonardo Neumeyer, María Ramos, Harry Bratt. 851-854 [doi]
- Automatic localization and diagnosis of pronunciation errors for second-language learners of EnglishDaniel Herron, Wolfgang Menzel, Eric Atwell, Roberto Bisiani, Fabio Daneluzzi, Rachel Morton, Juergen A. Schmidt. 855-858 [doi]
- SPECO - a multimedia multilingual teaching and training system for speech handicapped childrenKlára Vicsi, Peter Roach, Anne-Marie Öster, Zdravko Kacic, P. Barczikay, I. Sinka. 859-862 [doi]
- Recognition of continuous persian speech using a medium-sized vocabulary speech corpusS. M. Ahadi. 863-866 [doi]
- Multi-lingual speech recognition based on demi-syllable subword unitsTibor Fegyó, Péter Tatai. 867-870 [doi]
- MAP-based cross-language adaptation augmented by linguistic knowledge: from English to ChinesePascale Fung, Ma Chi Yuen, Wai Kat Liu. 871-874 [doi]
- Analysis of HMM models in alphabet letters recognitionStefan Grocholewski. 875-878 [doi]
- Tone recognition of Chinese continuous speech using tone critical segmentsKeikichi Hirose, Jin-Song Zhang. 879-882 [doi]
- Phonetic state tied-mixture tone modeling for large vocabulary continuous Mandarin speech recognitionTai-Hsuan Ho, Chin-Jung Liu, Herman Sun, Ming-Yi Tsai, Lin-Shan Lee. 883-886 [doi]
- The clustering algorithm for the definition of multilingual set of context dependent speech modelsBojan Imperl, Bogomir Horvat. 887-890 [doi]
- Study on tone classification of Chinese continuous speech in speech recognition systemJian Liu, Xiaodong He, Fuyuan Mo, Tiecheng Yu. 891-894 [doi]
- Decision tree-based triphones are robust and practical for mandarian speech recognitionYi Liu, Pascale Fung. 895-898 [doi]
- Decision trees for inter-word context dependencies in Spanish continuous speech recognition tasksKarmele López de Ipiña, Amparo Varona, Inés Torres, L. J. Rodríguez. 899-902 [doi]
- End points detection for noisy speech using a wavelet based algorithmAmin M. Nassar, Nemat S. Abdel Kader, Amr M. Refat. 903-906 [doi]
- Adaptation of acoustic models for multilingual recognitionC. Nieuwoudt, Elizabeth C. Botha. 907-910 [doi]
- Recognition of non-native German speech with multilingual recognizersUlla Uebler, Manuela Boros. 911-914 [doi]
- Relational vs. object-oriented models for representing speech: a comparison using ANDOSL dataToomas Altosaar, Bruce Millar, Martti Vainio. 915-918 [doi]
- First experiences of the German speechdat-car database collection in mobile environmentsChristoph Draxler, Robert Grudszus, Stephan Euler, Klaus Bengler. 919-922 [doi]
- OASIS - a framework for spoken language call steeringMike Edgington, David Attwater, Peter J. Durston. 923-926 [doi]
- VOCAPI - small standard API for command & controlEike Gegenmantel. 927-930 [doi]
- Standardised speech interfaces - key for objective evaluation of recognition accuracyChristel Müller, Karsten Schröder. 931-934 [doi]
- A medical rehabilitation diagnoses transcription method that integrates continuous and isolated word recognitionShoichi Matsunaga, Yoshiaki Noda, Katsutoshi Ohtsuki, Eiji Doi, Tomio Itoh. 935-938 [doi]
- Problems of creating a flexible e-mail reader for hungarianGéza Németh, Csaba Zainkó, Gábor Olaszy, Gábor Prószéky. 939-942 [doi]
- Interactive, TTS supported speech message composer for large, limited vocabulary, but open information systemsGábor Olaszy, Géza Németh, Péter Olaszi, Géza Gordos. 943-946 [doi]
- ALE for speech: a translation prototypeGerald Penn, Bob Carpenter. 947-950 [doi]
- An integrated system for Spanish CSR tasksL. J. Rodríguez, M. Inés Torres, J. M. Alcaide, Amparo Varona, Karmele López de Ipiña, Mikel Peñagarikano, Germán Bordel. 951-954 [doi]
- Use of speech synthesis in an applicationAngelien Sanderman, Ellen Bosgoed, Hans de Graaff, Peter van Splunder. 955-958 [doi]
- Text-to-audio-visual speech synthesis based on parameter generation from HMMMasatsune Tamura, Shigekazu Kondo, Takashi Masuko, Takao Kobayashi. 959-962 [doi]
- Authoring tools for speech synthesis using the sable markup standardJohan Wouters, Brian Rundle, Michael W. Macon. 963-966 [doi]
- Dynamic weighting of the distortion sequence in text-dependent speaker verificationAladdin M. Ariyaeeinia, P. Sivakumaran, M. Pawlewski, Martin J. Loomes. 967-970 [doi]
- On the use of supra model information from multiple classifiers for robust speaker identificationHakan Altinçay, Mübeccel Demirekler. 971-974 [doi]
- Missing features detection and handling for robust speaker verificationMounir El-Maliki, Andrzej Drygajlo. 975-978 [doi]
- High performance text-independent speaker recognition system based on voiced/unvoiced segmentation and multiple neural netsNikos Fakotakis, John Sirigos, George Kokkinakis. 979-982 [doi]
- Similarity normalization method based on world model and a posteriori probability for speaker verificationCorinne Fredouille, Jean-François Bonastre, Téva Merlin. 983-986 [doi]
- Text-independent speaker verification using virtual speaker based cohort normalizationToshihiro Isobe, Jun-ichi Takahashi. 987-990 [doi]
- Robust person verification based on speech and facial imagesJuergen Luettin, S. Ben-Yacoub. 991-994 [doi]
- A neural network-based text-dependent speaker verification system using suprasegmental featuresM. Mathew, B. Yegnanarayana, R. Sundar. 995-998 [doi]
- Modelling output probability distributions for enhancing speaker recognitionJason W. Pelecanos, Sridha Sridharan. 999-1002 [doi]
- On the use of neural networks to combine utterance and speaker verification systems in a text-dependent speaker verification taskLeandro Rodríguez Liñares, Carmen García-Mateo, José Luis Alba-Castro. 1003-1006 [doi]
- Genesys: a neural network model for speaker identificationBelén Ruíz-Mezcua, R. Rodríguez-Galán, Luis A. Hernández Gómez, Paloma Domingo-García, Enrique Bailly-Baillicre Gutiérrez. 1007-1010 [doi]
- Speaker verification with growing cell structuresBogdan Sabac, Inge Gavat. 1011-1014 [doi]
- Environment adaptation and long term parameters in speaker identificationChakib Tadj, Pierre Dumouchel, Mohamed Mihoubi, Pierre Ouellet. 1015-1018 [doi]
- Speaker identification using subband HMMSK. Yoshida, Kazuyuki Takagi, Kazuhiko Ozeki. 1019-1022 [doi]
- A priori threshold determination for phrase-prompted speaker verificationW. D. Zhang, Kwok-Kwong Yiu, Man-Wai Mak, C. K. Li, M. X. He. 1023-1026 [doi]
- A study of broadcast news audio stream segmentation and segment clusteringMatthew Harris, Xavier L. Aubert, Reinhold Haeb-Umbach, Peter Beyerlein. 1027-1030 [doi]
- Fast speaker change detection for broadcast news transcription and indexingDaben Liu, Francis Kubala. 1031-1034 [doi]
- Robust information extraction from spoken language dataDavid D. Palmer, Mari Ostendorf, John D. Burger. 1035-1038 [doi]
- Integrated transcription and identification of named entities in broadcast speechSteve Renals, Yoshihiko Gotoh. 1039-1042 [doi]
- Improvements in accuracy and speed in the HTK broadcast news transcription systemPhilip C. Woodland, J. J. Odell, Thomas Hain, G. L. Moore, Thomas Niesler, Andreas Tuerk, Edward W. D. Whittaker. 1043-1046 [doi]
- Formant analysis and synthesis using hidden Markov modelsAlex Acero. 1047-1050 [doi]
- Accurate estimation of sinusoidal parameters in an harmonic+noise model for speech synthesisGérard Bailly. 1051-1054 [doi]
- Modal synthesis and modeling of vowelsUnto K. Laine. 1055-1058 [doi]
- Shape invariant pitch modification of speech using a harmonic modelDarragh O Brien, Alex I. C. Monaghan. 1059-1062 [doi]
- Interaction of units in a unit selection databaseMark C. Beutnagel, Alistair Conkie. 1063-1066 [doi]
- Speech training for deaf and hearing-impaired peopleRamón García Gómez, Ricardo López Barquilla, José Ignacio Puertas Tera, José Parera Bermudez, Marie-Christine Haton, Jean-Paul Haton, Pierre Alinat, Sofia Moreno, Wolfgang Hess, Ma Araceli Sanchez Raya, Eduardo Alberto Martínez Gual, Juan Luis Navas-Chaveli Daza, Christophe Antoine, Marie-Madeleine Durel, Genevieve Maugin, Silke Hohmann. 1067-1070 [doi]
- A post-processing of speech for hearing impaired integrate into standard digital audio decodersShinichi Hoshino, Itaru Kaneko, Hideaki Kikuchi, Katsuhiko Shirai. 1071-1074 [doi]
- Effects of hoarseness on hypernasality ratingsSetsuko Imatomi, Takayuki Arai, Yuko Mimura, Masako Kato. 1075-1078 [doi]
- Cross-language analysis of voice onset time in stuttered speechN. Rezaei-Aghbash, Sandra P. Whiteside, P. A. Cudd. 1079-1082 [doi]
- A spoken dialog system for a mobile office robotHideki Asoh, Toshihiro Matsui, John Fry, Futoshi Asano, Satoru Hayamizu. 1139-1142 [doi]
- Interaction with an animated agent in a spoken dialogue systemLinda Bell, Joakim Gustafson. 1143-1146 [doi]
- Current practice in the development and evaluation of spoken language dialogue systemsNiels Ole Bernsen, Laila Dybkjær, Ulrich Heid. 1147-1150 [doi]
- The august spoken dialogue systemJoakim Gustafson, Nikolaj Lindberg, Magnus Lundeberg. 1151-1154 [doi]
- An event-based dialogue model and its implementation in multidial2Olivier Grisvard, Bertrand Gaiffe. 1155-1158 [doi]
- LODESTAR: a Mandarin spoken dialogue system for travel information retrievalChao Huang, Peng Xu, Xin Zhang, Shubin Zhao, Taiyi Huang, Bo Xu. 1159-1162 [doi]
- EUROPA: a generic framework for developing spoken dialogue systemsMunehiko Sasajima, Takehide Yano, Yasuyuki Kono. 1163-1166 [doi]
- Handling rich turn-taking in spoken dialogue systemsMikio Nakano, Kohji Dohsaka, Noboru Miyazaki, Jun-ichi Hirasawa, Masafumi Tamoto, Masahito Kawamori, Akira Sugiyama, Takeshi Kawabata. 1167-1170 [doi]
- Thus spoke the user to the wizardHannes Pirker, Georg Loderer, Harald Trost. 1171-1174 [doi]
- Automatic dialogue generator creates user defined applicationsAndrew N. Pargellis, Hong-Kwang Jeff Kuo, Chin-Hui Lee. 1175-1178 [doi]
- Flexible mixed-initiative dialogue for telephone servicesJosé Relaño-Gil, Daniel Tapias, Juan Manuel Villar-Navarro, Maria C. Gancedo, Luis A. Hernández Gómez. 1179-1182 [doi]
- User modelling in adaptive dialogue managementGert Veldhuijzen van Zanten. 1183-1186 [doi]
- Characterization of speech during imitationGal Ashour, Isak Gath. 1187-1190 [doi]
- The analysis of speaker individual features based on autoregressive hidden Markov modelsEvgeny I. Bovbel, Polina P. Tkachova, Igor E. Kheidorov. 1191-1194 [doi]
- Detection of speaker changes in an audio documentPerrine Delacourt, David Kryze, Christian Wellekens. 1195-1198 [doi]
- Dynamic test durations for text-independent speaker verification systemsAxel Glaeser. 1199-1202 [doi]
- Combination of vector quantization and gaussian mixture models for speaker verification with sparse training dataGuido Kolano, Peter Regel-Brietzmann. 1203-1206 [doi]
- A language-independent personal voice controller with embedded speaker verificationQi Li, Augustine Tsai, Weon-Goo Kim. 1207-1210 [doi]
- Vulnerability in speaker verification - a study of technical impostor techniquesJohan Lindberg, Mats Blomberg. 1211-1214 [doi]
- A study of computation speed-UPS of the GMM-UBM speaker recognition systemJack McLaughlin, Douglas A. Reynolds, Terry P. Gleason. 1215-1218 [doi]
- Conversational biometricsStéphane H. Maes. 1219-1222 [doi]
- On the security of HMM-based speaker verification systems against imposture using synthetic speechTakashi Masuko, Takafumi Hitotsumatsu, Keiichi Tokuda, Takao Kobayashi. 1223-1226 [doi]
- Speech signal parametrization for speaker recognition under voice disguise conditionsWojciech Majewski, Grazyna Mazur-Majewska. 1227-1230 [doi]
- On the relevance of language in speaker recognitionAntonio Satué-Villar, Marcos Faúndez-Zanuy. 1231-1234 [doi]
- Prediction of keyword spotting accuracy based on simulationYoichi Yamashita. 1235-1238 [doi]
- A fast version of the atros systemMaría José Castro, David Llorens, Joan-Andreu Sánchez, Francisco Casacuberta, Pablo Aibar, Encarna Segarra. 1239-1242 [doi]
- Task dependent loss functions in speech recognition: a* search over recognition latticesVaibhava Goel, William Byrne. 1243-1246 [doi]
- Theory of structured cogitation in speech recognitionVáclav Hanzl. 1247-1250 [doi]
- Efficient general lattice generation and rescoringAndrej Ljolje, Fernando Pereira, Michael Riley. 1251-1254 [doi]
- A fast and effective state decoding algorithmMingxing Xu, Fang Zheng, Wenhu Wu. 1255-1258 [doi]
- A multimodal, multilingual telephone application: the wildfire electronic assistantPhilippe Jeanrenaud, Greg Cockroft, Allard VanderHeidjen. 1259-1262 [doi]
- Speaker verification as a user-friendly access for the visually impairedEls den Os, Hans Jongebloed, Alice Stijsiger, Lou Boves. 1263-1266 [doi]
- Recognition, indexing and retrieval of british broadcast news with the THISL systemTony Robinson, Dave Abberley, David Kirby, Steve Renals. 1267-1270 [doi]
- Organization, communication, and control in the GALAXY-II conversational systemStephanie Seneff, Raymond Lau, Joseph Polifroni. 1271-1274 [doi]
- A mixed-initiative natural dialogue system for conference room reservationClaudia Pateras, Nicolas Chapados, Remi Kwan, Dominic Lavoie, Réal Tremblay. 1275-1278 [doi]
- Audio-visual synthesis of talking faces from speech production correlatesTakaaki Kuratate, Kevin G. Munhall, Philip Rubin, Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson, Hani Yehia. 1279-1282 [doi]
- Hearing by eye: visual spatial degradation and the mcgurk effectJohn MacDonald, Soren Andersen, Talis Bachmann. 1283-1286 [doi]
- Intensity- and location-normalized training for HMM-based visual speech recognitionYoshihiko Nankaku, Keiichi Tokuda, Tadashi Kitamura. 1287-1290 [doi]
- Speaker adaptation for audio-visual speech recognitionGerasimos Potamianos, Alexandros Potamianos. 1291-1294 [doi]
- The role of spatial separation on ventriloquism and mcgurk illusionsMonique Radeau, C. Colin. 1295-1298 [doi]
- Knowledge collection for natural language spoken dialog systemsEgbert Ammicht, Allen L. Gorin, Tirso Alonso. 1375-1378 [doi]
- Improving discourse management in TRIPS-98Donna K. Byron. 1379-1382 [doi]
- Speech act modeling in a spoken dialogue system using fuzzy hidden Markov model and bayes decision criterionChung-Hsien Wu, Gwo-Lang Yan, Chien-Liang Lin. 1383-1386 [doi]
- Task hierarchies representing sub-dialogs in speech dialog systemsUte Ehrlich. 1387-1390 [doi]
- Effects of system barge-in responses on user impressionsJun-ichi Hirasawa, Mikio Nakano, Takeshi Kawabata, Kiyoaki Aikawa. 1391-1394 [doi]
- A new word-confidence threshold technique to enhance the performance of spoken dialogue systemsRamón López-Cózar, Antonio J. Rubio, Pedro García, José C. Segura. 1395-1398 [doi]
- Confirmation strategies to improve correction rates in a telephonic inquiry dialogue systemC. Alexia Lavelle, Martine de Calmès, Guy Perennou. 1399-1402 [doi]
- Mathematical analysis of dialogue control strategiesYasuhisa Niimi, Takuya Nishimoto. 1403-1406 [doi]
- Processing of anaphoric and elliptic sentences in a spoken dialog systemJana Ocelíková, Václav Matousek. 1407-1410 [doi]
- Free-flow dialog management using formsKishore Papineni, Salim Roukos, Todd Ward. 1411-1414 [doi]
- Towards the detection and description of textual meaning indicators in spontaneous conversationsKlaus Ries. 1415-1418 [doi]
- Dialogue management in the dutch ARISE train timetable information systemJanienke Sturm, Els den Os, Lou Boves. 1419-1422 [doi]
- Problem spotting in human-machine interactionEmiel Krahmer, Marc Swerts, Mariët Theune, Mieke Weegels. 1423-1426 [doi]
- Consistent dialogue across concurrent topics based on an expert system modelBor-shen Lin, Hsin-Min Wang, Lin-Shan Lee. 1427-1430 [doi]
- Secondary codebook storage quantisationThomas M. Chapman, Costas S. Xydeas. 1431-1434 [doi]
- Pseudo-articulatory representations: promise, progress and problemsWilliam H. Edmondson, Dorota J. Iskra, P. Kienzle. 1435-1438 [doi]
- A 1.7KBPS waveform interpolation speech coder using decomposition of pitch cycle waveformGe Gao, P. C. Ching. 1439-1442 [doi]
- Enhanced analysis-by-synthesis waveform interpolative coding at 4 KBPSOded Gottesman, Allen Gersho. 1443-1446 [doi]
- Joint source-channel decoding by channel-coded optimal estimation (CCOE) for a CELP speech codecNorbert Görtz. 1447-1450 [doi]
- Analysis-by-synthesis low-rate multimode harmonic speech codingChunyan Li, Allen Gersho, Vladimir Cuperman. 1451-1454 [doi]
- Variable length coding of transformed LSF coefficientsLászló Lois. 1455-1458 [doi]
- Low bit-rate speech coding using quantization of variable length segmentsR. Mayrench, D. Malah. 1459-1462 [doi]
- Low delay analysis/synthesis schemes for joint speech enhancement and low bit rate speech codingRainer Martin, Hong-Goo Kang, Richard V. Cox. 1463-1466 [doi]
- A comparative study of several ADPCM schemes with linear and nonlinear predictionOscar Oliva, Marcos Faúndez-Zanuy. 1467-1470 [doi]
- Segmental feature extraction and coding for speech synthesisH. Ohmura, K. Tanaka. 1471-1474 [doi]
- Backward adaptive RBF-based hybrid predictors for CELP-type coders at medium bit-ratesCarmen Peláez-Moreno, Fernando Díaz-de-María. 1475-1478 [doi]
- An improved speech model with allowance for time-varying pitch harmonic amplitudes and frequencies in low bit-rate MBE codersValentin V. Sercov, Alexander A. Petrovsky. 1479-1482 [doi]
- Sparse vector linear prediction matrices with multidiagonal structureDavor Petrinovic, Davorka Petrinovic. 1483-1486 [doi]
- Source-dependent variable rate speech coding below 3 KBPSMilos Stefanovic, A. Kondoz. 1487-1490 [doi]
- A novel speech coding approach based on half-wave vector quantizationXiaoping Chen, Yantao Song, Tiecheng Yu. 1491-1494 [doi]
- Speech coding using mixture of gaussians polynomial modelParham Zolfaghari, Tony Robinson. 1495-1498 [doi]
- A statistical coarticulatory model for the hidden vocal-tract-resonance dynamicsLi Deng, Jeff Z. Ma. 1499-1502 [doi]
- A study on the effect of adding new dimensions to trajectories in the acoustic spaceDario Albesano, Renato de Mori, Roberto Gemello, Franco Mana. 1503-1506 [doi]
- Tail distribution modelling using the richter and power exponential distributionsM. J. F. Gales, Peder A. Olsen. 1507-1510 [doi]
- A study of duration in continuous speech recognition based on DDBHMMQingWei Zhao, Zuoying Wang, Dajin Lu. 1511-1514 [doi]
- Comparison of continuous-density and semi-continuous HMM in isolated words recognition systemsTzur Vaich, Arnon Cohen. 1515-1518 [doi]
- Form-based reasoning for mixed-initiative dialogue management in information-query systemsJennifer Chu-Carroll. 1519-1522 [doi]
- Knowledge sources in spoken dialogue systemsNils Dahlbäck, Arne Jönsson. 1523-1526 [doi]
- Overview of the ARISE projectEls den Os, Lou Boves, Lori Lamel, Paolo Baggia. 1527-1530 [doi]
- Creating natural dialogs in the carnegie mellon communicator systemAlexander I. Rudnicky, Eric H. Thayer, Paul C. Constantinides, Chris Tchou, R. Shern, Kevin A. Lenzo, W. Xu, Alice Oh. 1531-1534 [doi]
- Design strategies for spoken language dialog systemsSophie Rosset, Samir Bennacef, Lori Lamel. 1535-1538 [doi]
- A wideband speech coder based on harmonic coding at 16KBSA. Amodio, Gang Feng. 1539-1542 [doi]
- Perceptually based and embedded wideband CELP coding of speechAlexis Bernard, Abeer Alwan. 1543-1546 [doi]
- Very low bit rate voice coder based on a nonlinear hearing modelRudolf Földvári, László Gyimesi. 1547-1550 [doi]
- Low complexity bit allocation algorithm with psychoacoustical optimisationMarcos Perreau Guimaraes, Madeleine Bonnet, Nicolas Moreau. 1551-1554 [doi]
- A novel approach of low bit-rate speech coding based on sinusoidal representation and auditory modelWanggen Wan, Oscar C. Au, Cyan L. Keung, Chi H. Yim. 1555-1558 [doi]
- One pass cross word decoding for large vocabularies based on a lexical tree search organizationXavier L. Aubert. 1559-1562 [doi]
- Decision tree micro-prosody structures for text to speech synthesisAimin Chen, Shu Lian Wong, Saeed Vaseghi, Charles Ho. 1615-1618 [doi]
- Automatic modeling of duration in a Spanish text-to-speech system using neural networksRicardo de Córdoba, José A. Vallejo, Juan Manuel Montero, Juana M. Gutiérrez-Arriola, M. A. López, Juan Manuel Pardo. 1619-1622 [doi]
- Objective methods for evaluating synthetic intonationRobert A. J. Clark, Kurt E. Dusterhoff. 1623-1626 [doi]
- Using decision trees within the tilt intonation model to predict F0 contoursKurt E. Dusterhoff, Alan W. Black, Paul Taylor. 1627-1630 [doi]
- Levels of prosodic representation in spoken discourse: an empirical approachRichard Esposito, Li-chiung Yang. 1631-1634 [doi]
- Segmental duration modelling in a text-to-speech system for the galician languageXavier Fernández Salgado, Eduardo Rodríguez Banga. 1635-1638 [doi]
- The symbolic coding of segmental duration and tonal alignment: an extension to the INTSINT systemDaniel Hirst. 1639-1642 [doi]
- Training an application-dependent prosodic model corpus, model and evaluationYann Morlec, Gérard Bailly, Véronique Aubergé. 1643-1646 [doi]
- Farsi language prosodic structure, research and implementation using a speech synthesizerHamid Sheikhzadeh, A. Eshkevari, M. Khayatian, Mohammad Reza Sadigh, Seyed Mohammad Ahadi. 1647-1650 [doi]
- Acoustical characterisation of the accented syllable in portuguese, a contribution to the naturalness of speech synthesisJoão Paulo Teixeira, Elisabete Rosa Paulo, Diamantino Freitas, Maria da Graca Pinto. 1651-1654 [doi]
- Analysis and synthesis of the four tones in connected speech of the standard Chinese based on a command-response modelChangfu Wang, Hiroya Fujisaki, Sumio Ohno, Tomohiro Kodama. 1655-1658 [doi]
- A profile of the discourse and intonational structures of route descriptionsSandra Williams, Catherine I. Watson. 1659-1662 [doi]
- Neighborhood effects on spoken word recognition in JapaneseShigeaki Amano, Tadahisa Kondo. 1663-1666 [doi]
- Interference between surface form and abstract representation in spoken word perceptionC. Chéreau, Pierre A. Hallé, Juan Segui. 1667-1670 [doi]
- Are the mcgurk illusions affected by left or right presentation of the speaker face?C. Colin, Monique Radeau. 1671-1674 [doi]
- Prelexical locus of an illusory vowel effect in JapaneseEmmanuel Dupoux, Takao Fushimi, Kazuhiko Kakehi, Jacques Mehler. 1675-1678 [doi]
- Acoustic and perceptual characteristics of the Spanish fricativesSergio Feijóo, Santiago Fernández, Nieves Barros, Ramón Balsa. 1679-1686 [doi]
- Difference limen for formant frequency discrimination at high fundamental frequenciesFredrik Karlsson, Anders Eriksson. 1687-1690 [doi]
- Auditory features for human communication of stop consonants under full-band and low-pass conditionsEduardo Sá Marta, Luis Vieira de Sá. 1691-1694 [doi]
- Levels of reduction for German tense vowelsChristina Widera, Thomas Portele. 1695-1698 [doi]
- Enhanced likelihood computation using regressionPeter V. de Souza, Bhuvana Ramabhadran, Yuqing Gao, Michael Picheny. 1699-1702 [doi]
- High accuracy acoustic modeling using two-level decision-tree based state-tyingChaojun Liu, Xintian Wu, YongHong Yan. 1703-1706 [doi]
- Domain adduced state tying for cross-domain acoustic modellingRita Singh, Bhiksha Raj, Richard M. Stern. 1707-1710 [doi]
- Parameter tying and gaussian clustering for faster, better, and smaller speech recognitionAnanth Sankar, Venkata Ramana Rao Gadde. 1711-1714 [doi]
- A combined maximum mutual information and maximum likelihood approach for mixture density splittingRalf Schlüter, Wolfgang Macherey, Boris Müller, Hermann Ney. 1715-1718 [doi]
- Is talking to virtual more realistic?Luc E. Julia, Adam Cheyer. 1719-1722 [doi]
- Multi-person conversation via multi-modal interface - a robot who communicate with multi-user -Yosuke Matsusaka, Tsuyoshi Tojo, Sentaro Kubota, Kenji Furukawa, Daisuke Tamiya, Keisuke Hayata, Yuichiro Nakano, Tetsunori Kobayashi. 1723-1726 [doi]
- Multimodal systems for children: building a prototypeShrikanth Narayanan, Alexandros Potamianos, Haohong Wang. 1727-1730 [doi]
- Social bonding in talking with social autonomous creaturesMichio Okada, Noriko Suzuki, Masaaki Date. 1731-1734 [doi]
- The relationships between voice and gesture: eyebrow movements and questioningA. Purson, Serge Santi, Roxane Bertrand, Isabelle Guaïtella, J. Boyer, Christian Cavé. 1735-1738 [doi]
- Robust vector quantization for channels with memoryWen-Whei Chang, Heng-Iang Hsu, De-Yu Wang. 1739-1742 [doi]
- A multi-rate codec family based on GSM EFR and ITU-t g.729Balázs Kövesi, Claude Lamblin, Catherine Quinquis, Philippe Thiérion, William Navarro. 1743-1746 [doi]
- A novel channel distortion measure for vector quantization and a fuzzy model for codebook index assignmentJeng-Shyang Pan, Chin-Shiuh Shieh, T. F. Chiang. 1747-1750 [doi]
- A full-rate GSM-AMR candidateC. Sriratanaban, A. Kondoz. 1751-1754 [doi]
- A multi-rate speech and channel codec: a GSM AMR half-rate candidateStephane Villette, Milos Stefanovic, Ahmet M. Kondoz. 1755-1758 [doi]
- Language modeling for broadcast news transcriptionGilles Adda, Michèle Jardino, Jean-Luc Gauvain. 1759-1762 [doi]
- Large Span statistical language models: application to homophone disambiguation for large vocabulary speech recognition in FrenchFrédéric Béchet, Alexis Nasr, Thierry Spriet, Renato de Mori. 1763-1766 [doi]
- Language modelling and spoken dialogue systems - the ARISE experiencePaolo Baggia, Andreas Kellner, Guy Perennou, Cosmin Popovici, Janienke Sturm, Frank Wessel. 1767-1770 [doi]
- Language model level vs. lexical level for modeling pronunciation variation in a French CSRLaure Brieussel-Pousse, Guy Perennou. 1771-1774 [doi]
- Characteristics of Chinese language models for large vocabulary telephone speechRoger Ho-Yin Leung, Chi-Yan Choy, Hong C. Leung. 1775-1778 [doi]
- A new based distance language model for a dictation machine: application to MAUDD. Langlois, K. Smadli. 1779-1782 [doi]
- Using various language model smoothing techniques for the transcription of a weather forecast broadcasted by the czech radioLudek Müller, Josef Psutka. 1783-1786 [doi]
- Studies in acoustic training and language modeling using simulated speech dataDon McAllaster, Larry Gillick. 1787-1790 [doi]
- Language model adaptation using minimum discrimination informationWolfgang Reichl. 1791-1794 [doi]
- Automatic and manual clustering for large vocabulary speech recognition: a comparative studyK. Smadli, Armelle Brun, Imed Zitouni, Jean-Paul Haton. 1795-1798 [doi]
- Learning of stochastic context-free grammars by means of estimation algorithmsJoan-Andreu Sánchez, José-Miguel Benedí. 1799-1802 [doi]
- Part-of-speech n-gram and word n-gram fused language modelHirofumi Yamamoto, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 1803-1806 [doi]
- Linguistic features for whole sentence maximum entropy language modelsXiaojin Zhu, Stanley F. Chen, Ronald Rosenfeld. 1807-1810 [doi]
- Variable-length sequence language model for large vocabulary continuous dictation machineImed Zitouni, J. F. Mari, K. Smadli, Jean-Paul Haton. 1811-1814 [doi]
- Using detailed linguistic structure in language modellingRuiqiang Zhang, Ezra Black, Andrew M. Finch. 1815-1818 [doi]
- Predicting gradient F0 variation: pitch range and accent prominenceIvan Bulyko, Mari Ostendorf. 1819-1822 [doi]
- CART-based duration modeling using a novel method of extracting prosodic featuresPaul Deans, Andrew P. Breen, Peter Jackson. 1823-1826 [doi]
- A primary study on the randomness control of the prosodic boundary index for natural synthetic speechKi-Wan Eom, Jin Young Kim, Sun-Mi Kim. 1827-1830 [doi]
- On a hybrid time domain-LPC technique for prosody superimposing used for speech synthesisAttila Ferencz, István Nagy, Tunde-Csilla Kovács, Teodora Ratiu, Maria Ferencz. 1831-1834 [doi]
- Multilingual prosody modelling using cascades of regression trees and neural networksJustin Fackrell, Halewijn Vereecken, Jean-Pierre Martens, Bert Van Coile. 1835-1838 [doi]
- An efficient speaker adaptation method for TTS duration modelWentao Gu, Chilin Shih, Jan P. H. van Santen. 1839-1842 [doi]
- Child-directed speech synthesis: evaluation of prosodic variation for an educational computer programDavid House, Linda Bell, Kjell Gustafson, Linn Johansson. 1843-1846 [doi]
- Representation and processing of linguistic structures for an all-prosodic synthesis system using XMLMark Huckvale. 1847-1850 [doi]
- A study on a pitch alteration by using the formant and phase compensation techniquewon Park, Hyung-Bin Park, Myung-Jin Bae 0001. 1851-1854 [doi]
- Micro-prosodic control in cantonese text-to-speech synthesisTan Lee, Helen M. Meng, Wai H. Lau, W. K. Lo, P. C. Ching. 1855-1858 [doi]
- Exploring the naturalness of several German high-quality-text-to-speech systemsHansjörg Mixdorff, Dieter Mehnert. 1859-1862 [doi]
- Detecting accent sandhi in Japanese using a superpositional F0 modelAtsuhiro Sakurai, Hiromichi Kawanami, Keikichi Hirose. 1863-1866 [doi]
- Focus detection by comparison of speech waveformsSatoshi Kitagawa, Nick Campbell. 1867-1870 [doi]
- An advanced intonation model for synthesisMark Tatham, Eric Lewis, Katherine Morton. 1871-1874 [doi]
- A new F0 modification algorithm by manipulating harmonics of magnitude spectrumSatoshi Takano, Masanobu Abe. 1875-1878 [doi]
- A mixed strategy approach to Spanish prosodyJuan Manuel Villar-Navarro, Eduardo López Gonzalo, José Relaño-Gil. 1879-1882 [doi]
- Perception of overlapping syllablesWilliam A. Ainsworth. 1883-1886 [doi]
- Are transcriptions of speech material recorded by means of bugs reliable?Loredana Cerrato, Andrea Paoloni. 1887-1890 [doi]
- Influence of morphology on phoneme identification in spoken croatianVlasta Erdeljac, Damir Horga. 1891-1894 [doi]
- Modeling the masking of formant transitions in noiseJames J. Hant, Abeer Alwan. 1895-1898 [doi]
- Stabilised wavelet mellin transform: an auditory strategy for normalising sound-source sizeToshio Irino, Roy D. Patterson. 1899-1902 [doi]
- Phonological representations and repetition primingChristophe Pallier, Núria Sebastián-Gallés, Angels Colomé. 1907-1910 [doi]
- Distance score evaluation of the visualised speech spectra at audio-visual articulation trainingKlára Vicsi, F. Csatári, Zsolt Bakcsi, A. Tantos. 1911-1914 [doi]
- Objective and subjective evaluation of the acoustic models of a continuous speech recognition systemDavid A. van Leeuwen, Michael de Louwere. 1915-1918 [doi]
- Verbo-motor priming in the phonetic encoding of real and non-wordsSandra P. Whiteside, Rosemary A. Varley. 1919-1922 [doi]
- An improved MAP method for language model adaptationLangzhou Chen, Taiyi Huang. 1923-1926 [doi]
- Towards improved language model evaluation measuresPhilip Clarkson, Tony Robinson. 1927-1930 [doi]
- A novel language model based on self-organized learningTaiyi Huang, Langzhou Chen. 1931-1934 [doi]
- Combining syntactical and statistical language constraints in context-dependent language models for interactive speech applicationsUte Kilian, Fritz Class. 1935-1938 [doi]
- Assessment of smoothing methods and complex stochastic language modelingSven C. Martin, Christoph Hamacher, Jörg Liermann, Frank Wessel, Hermann Ney. 1939-1942 [doi]
- Domain adaptation for robust automatic speech recognition in car environmentsRolf Bippus, Alexander Fischer, Volker Stahl. 1943-1946 [doi]
- A DCT-based fast enhancement technique for robust speech recognition in automobile usageJun Huang, Yunxin Zhao, Stephen E. Levinson. 1947-1950 [doi]
- Fully adaptive SVD-based noise removal for robust speech recognitionKris Hermus, Ioannis Dologlou, Patrick Wambacq, Dirk Van Compernolle. 1951-1954 [doi]
- Towards spontaneous speech recognition for on-board car navigation and information systemsMartin Westphal, Alex Waibel. 1955-1958 [doi]
- Towards robust speech recognition in the telephony network environment - cellular and landline conditionsSubrata Das, David Lubensky, Cheng Wu. 1959-1962 [doi]
- An overview of the PICASSO project research activities in speaker verification for telephone applicationsFrédéric Bimbot, Mats Blomberg, Lou Boves, Gérard Chollet, Cédric Jaboulet, Bruno Jacob, Jamal Kharroubi, Johan Koolwaaij, Johan Lindberg, Johnny Mariéthoz, Chafic Mokbel, Houda Mokbel. 1963-1966 [doi]
- Deliberate imposture: a challenge for automatic speaker verification systemsDominique Genoud, Gérard Chollet. 1971-1974 [doi]
- Variance flooring, scaling and tying for text-dependent speaker verificationHåkan Melin, Johan Lindberg. 1975-1978 [doi]
- Client / world model synchronous alignement for speaker verificationJohnny Mariéthoz, Dominique Genoud, Frédéric Bimbot, Chafic Mokbel. 1979-1982 [doi]
- Linguistic phrase spotting in a simple application spoken dialogue systemManuela Boros, Paul Heisterkamp. 1983-1986 [doi]
- Learning of domain dependent knowledge in semantic networksFrank Deinzer, Julia Fischer, U. Ahlrichs, Elmar Nöth. 1987-1990 [doi]
- Combining words and prosody for information extraction from speechDilek Z. Hakkani-Tür, Gökhan Tür, Andreas Stolcke, Elizabeth Shriberg. 1991-1994 [doi]
- Error correction translation using text corporaKai Ishikawa, Eiichiro Sumita. 1995-1998 [doi]
- Efficient sentence disambiguation by preferred constituent orderSusanne Kronenberg, K. Skuplik. 1999-2002 [doi]
- Identifying linguistic segmentations in Chinese spoken dialogueYue-Shi Lee, Hsin-Hsi Chen. 2003-2006 [doi]
- Error recovery for robust language understanding in spoken dialogue systemsTung-Hui Chiang, Yi-Chung Lin. 2007-2010 [doi]
- A monolingual semantic decoder based on word sense disambiguation for mixed language understandingXiaohuo Liu, Pascale Fung, Chi Shun Cheung. 2011-2014 [doi]
- To believe is to understandHelen M. Meng, Wai Lam, Carmen Wai. 2015-2018 [doi]
- A hybrid approach to spoken dialogue understanding: prosody, statistics and partial parsingElmar Nöth, Jürgen Haas, Volker Warnke, Florian Gallwitz, Manuela Boros. 2019-2022 [doi]
- Portable speech interpreter which has voice input and sophisticated correction functionsYasunari Obuchi, Atsuko Koizumi, Yoshinori Kitahara, Jun-ichi Matsuda, Toshihisa Tsukada. 2023-2026 [doi]
- Categorical understanding using statistical ngram modelsAlexandros Potamianos, Giuseppe Riccardi, Shrikanth Narayanan. 2027-2030 [doi]
- Detection and correction of speech repairs in word latticesJörg Spilker, Hans Weber, Günther Görz. 2031-2034 [doi]
- Connectionist language models for speech understanding: the problem of word order variationIgor Schadle, Jean-Yves Antoine, Daniel Memmi. 2035-2038 [doi]
- Semi-automatic acquisition of domain-specific semantic structuresKai-Chung Siu, Helen M. Meng. 2039-2042 [doi]
- Transformation into language processing units by dividing and connecting utterance unitsToshiyuki Takezawa. 2043-2046 [doi]
- Learning a lightweight robust deterministic parserAboy Wong, Dekai Wu. 2047-2050 [doi]
- An information-based method for selecting feature types for word predictionDekai Wu, Zhifang Sui, Jun Zhao. 2051-2054 [doi]
- A robust parser for spoken language understandingYe-Yi Wang. 2055-2058 [doi]
- Aiuruete: a high-quality concatenative text-to-speech system for brazilian portuguese with demisyllabic analysis-based units and a hierarchical model of rhythm productionPlínio Almeida Barbosa, Fábio Violaro, Eleonora Cavalcante Albano, Flávio Simoes, Patrícia Aparecida Aquino, Sandra Madureira, Edson Françozo. 2059-2062 [doi]
- A parser-based text preprocessor for romanian language TTS synthesisDragos Burileanu, Claudius Dan, Mihai Sima, Corneliu Burileanu. 2063-2066 [doi]
- A language-independent probabilistic model for automatic conversion between graphemic and phonemic transcription of wordsEvangelos Dermatas, George Kokkinakis. 2071-2074 [doi]
- Acquisition of an extensive rule set for slovene grapheme-to-allophone transcriptionJerneja Gros, France Mihelic. 2075-2078 [doi]
- Voice conversion between UK and US accented EnglishChing-Hsiang Ho, Saeed Vaseghi, Aimin Chen. 2079-2082 [doi]
- Development of speech design tool SESIGN99 to enhance synthesized speechHideyuki Mizuno, Masanobu Abe, Shin ya Nakajima. 2083-2086 [doi]
- Automation of the training procedures for neural networks performing multi-lingual grapheme to phoneme conversionHorst-Udo Hain. 2087-2090 [doi]
- Parsing hungarian sentences in order to determine their prosodic structures in a multilingual TTS systemIlona Koutny. 2091-2094 [doi]
- Text-to-speech synthesis of estonianMeelis Mihkla, Arvo Eek, Einar Meister. 2095-2098 [doi]
- Development of an emotional speech synthesiser in SpanishJuan Manuel Montero, Juana M. Gutiérrez-Arriola, José Colás, Javier Macías Guarasa, Emilia Enríquez, Juan Manuel Pardo. 2099-2102 [doi]
- S5: the SQEL slovene speech synthesis systemNikola Pavesic, Jerneja Gros. 2103-2106 [doi]
- A multilingual text processing engine for the PAPAGENO text-to-speech synthesis systemMatej Rojc, Janez Stergar, Ralph Wilhelm, Horst-Udo Hain, Martin Holzapfel, Bogomir Horvat. 2107-2110 [doi]
- Toshiba English text-to-speech synthesizer (TESS)Chang K. Suh, Takehiko Kagoshima, Masahiro Morita, Shigenobu Seto, Masami Akamine. 2111-2114 [doi]
- Towards the generation of French phonetic inflected formsFrédérique Sannier, Véronique Aubergé. 2115-2118 [doi]
- Canadian French text-to-speech synthesis: modeling an optimal set of realizations for dialect markersEvelyne Tzoukermann, Lucie Ménard, Marise Ouellet. 2119-2122 [doi]
- Machine learning of word pronunciation: the case against abstractionBertjan Busser, Walter Daelemans, Antal van den Bosch. 2123-2126 [doi]
- Context scope selection in multi-Span statistical language modelingJerome R. Bellegarda. 2163-2166 [doi]
- Topic-based language models using EMDaniel Gildea, Thomas Hofmann. 2167-2170 [doi]
- Augmenting words with linguistic information for n-gram language modelsLucian Galescu, Eric K. Ringger. 2171-2174 [doi]
- A language model combining n-grams and stochastic finite state automataAlexis Nasr, Yannick Estève, Frédéric Béchet, Thierry Spriet, Renato de Mori. 2175-2178 [doi]
- Combining nonlocal, syntactic and n-gram dependencies in language modelingJun Wu, Sanjeev Khudanpur. 2179-2182 [doi]
- Robust feature vector compression algorithm for distributed speech recognitionImre Kiss, Pekka Kapanen. 2183-2186 [doi]
- Separation of speech signals using iterative multi-pitch analysis and predictionMatti Karjalainen, Tero Tolonen. 2187-2190 [doi]
- Feature fusion for music detectionEluned S. Parris, Michael J. Carey 0002, Harvey Lloyd-Thomas. 2191-2194 [doi]
- Speech variability in the modulation spectral domain - SANOVA technique -Sarel Van Vuuren, Hynek Hermansky. 2195-2198 [doi]
- Improving harmonic selection for speech intelligibility enhancement by the reassignment methodDekun Yang, Georg F. Meyer, William A. Ainsworth. 2199-2202 [doi]
- A hierarchical approach to large-scale speaker recognitionHomayoon S. M. Beigi, Stéphane H. Maes, Upendra V. Chaudhari, Jeffrey S. Sorensen. 2203-2206 [doi]
- A segmental approach to text-independent speaker verificationJan Cernocký, Dijana Petrovska-Delacrétaz, Stéphane Pigeon, Patrick Verlinde, Gérard Chollet. 2207-2210 [doi]
- Who spoke when? - automatic segmentation and clustering for determining speaker turnsS. E. Johnson. 2211-2214 [doi]
- The 1999 NIST speaker recognition evaluation, using summed two-channel telephone data for speaker detection and speaker trackingMark A. Przybocki, Alvin F. Martin. 2215-2218 [doi]
- Speaker tracking and detection with multiple speakersM. Kemal Sönmez, Larry P. Heck, Mitchel Weintraub. 2219-2222 [doi]
- Sinusoidal representation and auditory model-based parametric matching and smoothing and its application in speech analysis/synthesisOscar C. Au, Wanggen Wan, Cyan L. Keung, Chi H. Yim. 2287-2290 [doi]
- Choose the best to modify the least: a new generation concatenative synthesis systemMarcello Balestri, Alberto Pacchiotti, Silvia Quazza, Pier Luigi Salza, Stefano Sandri. 2291-2294 [doi]
- Selection of waveform units for corpus-based Mandarin speech synthesis based on decision trees and prosodic modification costsFu-Chiang Chou, Chiu-yu Tseng, Lin-Shan Lee. 2295-2298 [doi]
- Improving quality in a speech synthesizer based on the MBROLA algorithmBorja Etxebarria, Inmaculada Hernáez, I. Madariaga, Eva Navas, J. C. Rodríguez, R. Gándara. 2299-2302 [doi]
- A novel model TD-PSPTP for speech synthesisYan Huang, Bo Xu. 2303-2306 [doi]
- Detection of non-stationarity in speech signals and its application to time-scalingDavid A. Kapilow, Yannis Stylianou, Juergen Schroeter. 2307-2310 [doi]
- A v-CV waveform based speech synthesis using global minimization of pitch conversion and concatenation distortion in v-CV unit sequenceTakao Koyama, Jun-ichi Takahashi. 2311-2314 [doi]
- Stable speech synthesis using recurrent radial basis functionsIain Mann, Steve McLaughlin. 2315-2318 [doi]
- Efficient weight training for selection based synthesisYoram Meron, Keikichi Hirose. 2319-2322 [doi]
- Speech synthesis using HMM-based acoustic unit inventoryJindrich Matousek. 2323-2326 [doi]
- An enhanced ABS/OLA sinusoidal model for waveform synthesis in TTSMichael W. Macon, Mark A. Clements. 2327-2330 [doi]
- High vowel /i y u/ in canadian and continental French: an analysis for a TTS systemMarise Ouellet, Evelyne Tzoukermann, Lucie Ménard. 2331-2334 [doi]
- Speech production based on the mel-frequency cepstral coefficientsZbynek Tychtl, Josef Psutka. 2335-2338 [doi]
- Exploiting improved parameter smoothing within a hybrid concatenative/LPC speech synthesizerErhard Rank. 2339-2342 [doi]
- Synchronization of speech frames based on phase data with application to concatenative speech synthesisYannis Stylianou. 2343-2346 [doi]
- Simultaneous modeling of spectrum, pitch and duration in HMM-based speech synthesisTakayoshi Yoshimura, Keiichi Tokuda, Takashi Masuko, Takao Kobayashi, Tadashi Kitamura. 2347-2350 [doi]
- A CASA-labelling model using the localisation cue for robust cocktail-party speech recognitionHervé Glotin, Frédéric Berthommier, Emmanuel Tessier. 2351-2354 [doi]
- Noise-invariant representation for speech signalsAruna Bayya, B. Yegnanarayana. 2355-2358 [doi]
- Natural-quality background noise coding using residual substitutionKhaled El-Maleh, Peter Kabal. 2359-2362 [doi]
- Microphone array design for robust speech acquisition and recognitionJulian Fernández, Eduardo Lleida, Enrique Masgrau. 2363-2366 [doi]
- Study of the influence of noise pre-processing on the performance of a low bit rate parametric speech coderGwénaël Guilmin, Régine Le Bouquin-Jeannès, Philippe Gournay. 2367-2370 [doi]
- MLP network for enhancement of noisy MFCC vectorsHemmo Haverinen, Petri Salmela, Juha Häkkinen, Mikko Lehtokangas, Jukka Saarinen. 2371-2374 [doi]
- Hands-free voice activation in noisy car environmentJuha Iso-Sipilä, Kari Laurila, Ramalingam Hariharan, Olli Viikki. 2375-2378 [doi]
- A wavelet denoising technique to improve endpoint detection in adverse conditionsLamia Karray, Emmanuel Polard. 2379-2382 [doi]
- Speech enhancement for linear-predictive-analysis-by-synthesis codersMarcin Kuropatwinski, Dieter Leckschat, Kristian Kroschel, Andrzej Czyzewski, Chaz Hales. 2383-2386 [doi]
- Robust HMM to variation of noisy environments based on variance extension of noise modelsHiroshi Matsumoto, Hiroaki Ubukata. 2387-2390 [doi]
- The fourth-order cumulant of speech signals with application to voice activity detectionElias Nemer, Rafik A. Goubran, Samy Mahmoud. 2391-2394 [doi]
- The dependence of feature vectors under adverse noiseWoei-Chyang Shieh, Sen-Chia Chang. 2395-2398 [doi]
- Speech detection and SNR prediction basing on amplitude modulation pattern recognitionJürgen Tchorz, Birger Kollmeier. 2399-2402 [doi]
- Fast active noise control for robust speech acquisitionLuis Vicente, Stephen J. Elliott, Enrique Masgrau. 2403-2406 [doi]
- Missing data theory, spectral subtraction and signal-to-noise estimation for robust ASR: an integrated studyAscension Vizinho, Phil D. Green, Martin Cooke, Ljubomir Josifovski. 2407-2410 [doi]
- Single channel speech enhancement using principal component analysis and MDL subspace selectionRolf Vetter, Nathalie Virag, Philippe Renevey, Jean-Marc Vesin. 2411-2414 [doi]
- Automatically deriving categories for translationSergio Barrachina, Juan Miguel Vilar. 2415-2418 [doi]
- An inter-domain portable approach to interchange format constructionAnna Corazza. 2419-2422 [doi]
- Distributed representation of vocabularies in the RECONTRA neural translatorGustavo A. Casañ, Maria Asunción Castaño. 2423-2426 [doi]
- Robust information extraction in a speech translation systemNorbert Reithinger. 2427-2430 [doi]
- End-to-end evaluation in ATR-MATRIX: speech translation system between English and JapaneseFumiaki Sugaya, Toshiyuki Takezawa, Akio Yokoo, Seiichi Yamamoto. 2431-2434 [doi]
- Story segmentation and topic detection for recognized speechSatya Dharanipragada, Martin Franz, J. Scott McCarley, Salim Roukos, Todd Ward. 2435-2438 [doi]
- Topic tracking for radio, TV broadcast, and newswireHubert Jin, Richard M. Schwartz, Sreenivasa Sista, Frederick Walls. 2439-2442 [doi]
- The beta-binomial mixture model for word frequencies in documents with applications to information retrievalStephen A. Lowe. 2443-2446 [doi]
- Topic spotting and its description of summary from spontaneous speechMasayuki Nakazawa, Jianxin Zhang, Ryuichi Oka. 2447-2450 [doi]
- Topic detection in broadcast newsFrederick Walls, Hubert Jin, Sreenivasa Sista, Richard M. Schwartz. 2451-2454 [doi]
- Criteria for evaluating internet tutorials in speech communication sciencesChris Bowerman, Anders Eriksson, Mark Huckvale, Mike Rosner, Mark Tatham, Maria Wolters. 2455-2458 [doi]
- Javaspeechlab - interactive speech analysis laboratory on the world-wide webAndrzej Drygajlo, Guy Delafontaine. 2459-2462 [doi]
- Reviving discrete HMMs: the myth about the superiority of continuous HMMsVassilios Digalakis, Stavros Tsakalidis, Leonardo Neumeyer. 2463-2466 [doi]
- Principles and design of an intelligent system for information retrieval over the internet with a multimodal dialogue interfaceHiroya Fujisaki, Hiroyuki Kameda, Sumio Ohno, Kenji Abe, Michio Iijima, Masayoshi Suzuki, Kazunari Taketa. 2467-2470 [doi]
- An asynchronous virtual meeting system for bi-directional speech dialogTakuya Nishimoto, Hidehiro Yuki, Takehiko Kawahara, Yasuhisa Niimi. 2471-2474 [doi]
- Prosodic effects on segmental durations in greekAntonis Botinis, Marios Fourakis, Irini Prinou. 2475-2478 [doi]
- Within-utterance correlation for speech recognitionMats Blomberg. 2479-2482 [doi]
- Techniques for robust speech recognition in the car environmentPhilippe Gelin, Jean-Claude Junqua. 2483-2486 [doi]
- An on-line acoustic compensation technique for robust speech recognitionDiego Giuliani. 2487-2490 [doi]
- Using adaptive signal limiter together with noise-robust techniques for noisy speech recognitionWei-Wen Hung, Hsiao-Chuan Wang. 2491-2494 [doi]
- A robust environment-effects suppression training algorithm for adverse Mandarin speech recognitionWei-Tyng Hong, Sin-Horng Chen. 2495-2498 [doi]
- Robust speaker adaptation of continuous density HMMS using multilayer perceptron networkMikko Harju, Petri Salmela, Olli Viikki, Mikko Lehtokangas, Jukka Saarinen. 2499-2502 [doi]
- Regression class selection and speaker adaptation with MLLR in Mandarin continuous speech recognitionChengrong Li, Jingdong Chen, Bo Xu. 2503-2506 [doi]
- Regression transformation of prior means for speaker adaptationGuoqiang Li, Limin Du, Ziqiang Hou. 2507-2510 [doi]
- Linguistic tree based maximum likelihood model interpolationLiu Feng, Chi-wei Che, Peng Yu, Zuoying Wang. 2511-2514 [doi]
- Model-based speaker normalization methods for speech recognitionMasaki Naito, Li Deng, Yoshinori Sagisaka. 2515-2518 [doi]
- Maximum likelihood eigenspace and MLLR for speech recognition in noisy environmentsPatrick Nguyen, Christian Wellekens, Jean-Claude Junqua. 2519-2522 [doi]
- A study of speaker adaptation for speaker independent speech recognition method using phoneme similarity vectorYoshio Ono, Maki Yamada, Masakatsu Hoshimi. 2523-2526 [doi]
- An investigation into vocal tract length normalisationL. F. Uebel, Philip C. Woodland. 2527-2530 [doi]
- Adaptation to environment and speaker using maximum likelihood neural networksZong Suk Yuk, James Flanagan, Mahesh Krishnamoorthy, Krishna Dayanidhi. 2531-2534 [doi]
- Corrective training for speaker adaptationXiuyang Yu, Wayne Ward. 2535-2538 [doi]
- Delay estimation for transform domain acoustical echo cancellationRabih Abouchakra, Peter Kabal. 2539-2542 [doi]
- Noise reduction using perceptual spectral changeChristophe Beaugeant, Pascal Scalart. 2543-2546 [doi]
- Intelligibility improvements using diverse sub-band processing applied to noisy speechAmir Hussain, Douglas R. Campbell. 2547-2550 [doi]
- Recognizing simultaneous speech: a genetic algorithm approachAthanasios Koutras, Evangelos Dermatas, George Kokkinakis. 2551-2554 [doi]
- Speech enhancement system for hands-free telephone based on the psychoacoustically motivated filter bank with allpass frequency transformation #Krzysztof Bielawski, Alexander A. Petrovsky. 2555-2558 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using a multi-microphone sub-band adaptive griffiths-jim noise cancellerPaul W. Shields, Douglas R. Campbell. 2559-2562 [doi]
- Qualiphone-a: a perceptual speech quality evaluation system for analog mobile networksMate Szarvas, Tibor Fegyó, Péter Tatai, Géza Gordos. 2563-2566 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using nonlinear microphone array under nonstationary noise conditionsHiroshi Saruwatari, Shoji Kajita, Kazuya Takeda, Fumitada Itakura. 2567-2570 [doi]
- Auditory masking threshold estimation for broadband noise sources with application to speech enhancementRuhi Sarikaya, John H. L. Hansen. 2571-2574 [doi]
- Segregation of vowel in background noise using the model of segregating two acoustic sources based on auditory scene analysisMasashi Unoki, Masato Akagi. 2575-2578 [doi]
- Analysis and on-line detection of audible distortions in GSM telephonyChristophe Veaux, Pascal Scalart, André Gilloire. 2579-2582 [doi]
- A parameter-based 2-talker detection apparatus for echo cancellationWen Rong Ru, Shih-Chen Lin, Po-Cheng Chen, Chun-Hung Kuo. 2583-2586 [doi]
- Co-channel speech separation in the presence of correlated and uncorrelated noisesKuan-Chieh Yen, Jun Huang, Yunxin Zhao. 2587-2590 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using a mixture-maximum modelDavid Burshtein, Sharon Gannot. 2591-2594 [doi]
- Concurrent speakers separation through binaural processing of stereo recordingsJoaquin Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Santiago Cruz-Llanas, Javier Ortega-Garcia. 2595-2598 [doi]
- Spectral subtraction with adaptive averaging of the gain functionHarald Gustafsson, Sven Nordholm, Ingvar Claesson. 2599-2602 [doi]
- A reliability criterion for time-frequency labeling based on periodicity in an auditory sceneFrançois Gaillard, Frédéric Berthommier, Gang Feng, Jean-Luc Schwartz. 2603-2606 [doi]
- Broadband noise cancellation systems: new approach to working performance optimizationSerguei Koval, Mikhail Stolbov, Mikhail Khitrov. 2607-2610 [doi]
- Noise subtraction with parametric recursive gain curvesKlaus Linhard, Tim Haulick. 2611-2614 [doi]
- Performance comparison of several adaptive schemes for microphone array beamformingEnrique Masgrau, Luis Aguilar, Eduardo Lleida. 2615-2618 [doi]
- An objective distortion estimator for hearing aids and its application to noise reductionMitsunori Mizumachi, Masato Akagi. 2619-2622 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using fourth-order cumulants and time-domain optimal filtersElias Nemer, Rafik A. Goubran, Samy Mahmoud. 2623-2626 [doi]
- Missing feature theory and probabilistic estimation of clean speech components for robust speech recognitionPhilippe Renevey, Andrzej Drygajlo. 2627-2630 [doi]
- Distortion effects of several cumulant-based wiener filtering algorithmsJosep M. Salavedra, Xavier Bou. 2631-2634 [doi]
- Combined noise suppression system for monaural cochlear implantsMilan Svoboda, Pavel Sovka, Petr Pollák. 2635-2638 [doi]
- Objective prediction of speech intelligibility at high ambient noise levels using the speech transmission indexSander J. van Wijngaarden, Herman J. M. Steeneken. 2639-2642 [doi]
- Noise-regularized adaptive filtering for speech enhancementEric A. Wan, Rudolph van der Merwe. 2643-2646 [doi]
- Speech enhancement using karhunen-lo ve transformation and wiener filtering in critical bandsF. Zarubin, Alexander Kovtonyuk, K. Zadiraka. 2647-2650 [doi]
- The CPK NLP suite for spoken language understandingTom Brøndsted. 2651-2654 [doi]
- Towards multi-domain speech understanding using a two-stage recognizerGrace Chung, Stephanie Seneff, I. Lee Hetherington. 2655-2658 [doi]
- A slovenian spoken dialog system for air flight inquiriesIvo Ipsic, France Mihelic, Simon Dobrisek, Jerneja Gros, Nikola Pavesic. 2659-2662 [doi]
- A pervasive conversational interface for information interactionGanesh N. Ramaswamy, Jan Kleindienst,