8,659 research outputs found

    Improvements on automatic speech segmentation at the phonetic level

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    In this paper, we present some recent improvements in our automatic speech segmentation system, which only needs the speech signal and the phonetic sequence of each sentence of a corpus to be trained. It estimates a GMM by using all the sentences of the training subcorpus, where each Gaussian distribution represents an acoustic class, which probability densities are combined with a set of conditional probabilities in order to estimate the probability densities of the states of each phonetic unit. The initial values of the conditional probabilities are obtained by using a segmentation of each sentence assigning the same number of frames to each phonetic unit. A DTW algorithm fixes the phonetic boundaries using the known phonetic sequence. This DTW is a step inside an iterative process which aims to segment the corpus and re-estimate the conditional probabilities. The results presented here demonstrate that the system has a good capacity to learn how to identify the phonetic boundaries. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.This work was supported by the Spanish MICINN under contract TIN2008-06856-C05-02Gómez Adrian, JA.; Calvo Lance, M. (2011). Improvements on automatic speech segmentation at the phonetic level. En Progress in Pattern Recognition, Image Analysis, Computer Vision, and Applications. Springer Verlag (Germany). 7042:557-564. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25085-9_66S5575647042Toledano, D.T., Hernández Gómez, L., Villarrubia Grande, L.: Automatic Phonetic Segmentation. IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing 11(6), 617–625 (2003)Kipp, A., Wesenick, M.B., Schiel, F.: Pronunciation modelling applied to automatic segmentation of spontaneous speech. In: Proceedings of Eurospeech, Rhodes, Greece, pp. 2013–2026 (1997)Sethy, A., Narayanan, S.: Refined Speech Segmentation for Concatenative Speech Synthesis. In: Proceedings of ICSLP, Denver, Colorado, USA, pp. 149–152 (2002)Jarify, S., Pastor, D., Rosec, O.: Cooperation between global and local methods for the automatic segmentation of speech synthesis corpora. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, pp. 1666–1669 (2006)Romsdorfer, H., Pfister, B.: Phonetic Labeling and Segmentation of Mixed-Lingual Prosody Databases. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Lisbon, Portual, pp. 3281–3284 (2005)Paulo, S., Oliveira, L.C.: DTW-based Phonetic Alignment Using Multiple Acoustic Features. In: Proceedings of Eurospeech, Geneva, Switzerland, pp. 309–312 (2003)Park, S.S., Shin, J.W., Kim, N.S.: Automatic Speech Segmentation with Multiple Statistical Models. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, pp. 2066–2069 (2006)Mporas, I., Ganchev, T., Fakotakis, N.: Speech segmentation using regression fusion of boundary predictions. Computer Speech and Language 24, 273–288 (2010)Povey, D., Woodland, P.C.: Minimum Phone Error and I-smoothing for improved discriminative training. In: Proceedings of ICASSP, Orlando, Florida, USA, pp. 105–108 (2002)Kuo, J.W., Wang, H.M.: Minimum Boundary Error Training for Automatic Phonetic Segmentation. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, pp. 1217–1220 (2006)Huggins-Daines, D., Rudnicky, A.I.: A Constrained Baum-Welch Algorithm for Improved Phoneme Segmentation and Efficient Training. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, pp. 1205–1208 (2006)Ogbureke, K.U., Carson-Berndsen, J.: Improving initial boundary estimation for HMM-based automatic phonetic segmentation. In: Proceedings of Interspeech, Brighton, UK, pp. 884–887 (2009)Gómez, J.A., Castro, M.J.: Automatic Segmentation of Speech at the Phonetic Level. In: Caelli, T.M., Amin, A., Duin, R.P.W., Kamel, M.S., de Ridder, D. (eds.) SPR 2002 and SSPR 2002. LNCS, vol. 2396, pp. 672–680. Springer, Heidelberg (2002)Gómez, J.A., Sanchis, E., Castro-Bleda, M.J.: Automatic Speech Segmentation Based on Acoustical Clustering. In: Hancock, E.R., Wilson, R.C., Windeatt, T., Ulusoy, I., Escolano, F. (eds.) SSPR&SPR 2010. LNCS, vol. 6218, pp. 540–548. Springer, Heidelberg (2010)Moreno, A., Poch, D., Bonafonte, A., Lleida, E., Llisterri, J., Mariño, J.B., Nadeu, C.: Albayzin Speech Database: Design of the Phonetic Corpus. In: Proceedings of Eurospeech, Berlin, Germany, vol. 1, pp. 653–656 (September 1993)TIMIT Acoustic-Phonetic Continuous Speech Corpus, National Institute of Standards and Technology Speech Disc 1-1.1, NTIS Order No. PB91-5050651996 (October 1990

    Phonetic level annotation and segmentation of Hungarian speech databases

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    The purpose of this paper is to give an outline of phonetic level annotation and segmentation of Hungarian speech databases at the levels of definition and speech technology. In addition to giving guidance to the definition of the content of a database, the technique of annotation and the procedure of manual segmentation, we also discuss mathematical models of computeraided semi-automatic and automatic segmentation. Finally, we are summing up our observations about the application of the procedures we gained during the processing of the MTBA Hungarian Telephone Speech Database

    An acoustic-phonetic approach in automatic Arabic speech recognition

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    In a large vocabulary speech recognition system the broad phonetic classification technique is used instead of detailed phonetic analysis to overcome the variability in the acoustic realisation of utterances. The broad phonetic description of a word is used as a means of lexical access, where the lexicon is structured into sets of words sharing the same broad phonetic labelling. This approach has been applied to a large vocabulary isolated word Arabic speech recognition system. Statistical studies have been carried out on 10,000 Arabic words (converted to phonemic form) involving different combinations of broad phonetic classes. Some particular features of the Arabic language have been exploited. The results show that vowels represent about 43% of the total number of phonemes. They also show that about 38% of the words can uniquely be represented at this level by using eight broad phonetic classes. When introducing detailed vowel identification the percentage of uniquely specified words rises to 83%. These results suggest that a fully detailed phonetic analysis of the speech signal is perhaps unnecessary. In the adopted word recognition model, the consonants are classified into four broad phonetic classes, while the vowels are described by their phonemic form. A set of 100 words uttered by several speakers has been used to test the performance of the implemented approach. In the implemented recognition model, three procedures have been developed, namely voiced-unvoiced-silence segmentation, vowel detection and identification, and automatic spectral transition detection between phonemes within a word. The accuracy of both the V-UV-S and vowel recognition procedures is almost perfect. A broad phonetic segmentation procedure has been implemented, which exploits information from the above mentioned three procedures. Simple phonological constraints have been used to improve the accuracy of the segmentation process. The resultant sequence of labels are used for lexical access to retrieve the word or a small set of words sharing the same broad phonetic labelling. For the case of having more than one word-candidates, a verification procedure is used to choose the most likely one

    Automatic Phonetic Transcription of Non-Prompted Speech

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    A reliable method for automatic phonetic transcription of non− prompted German speech has been developed at th

    Alcohol Language Corpus

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    The Alcohol Language Corpus (ALC) is the first publicly available speech corpus comprising intoxicated and sober speech of 162 female and male German speakers. Recordings are done in the automotive environment to allow for the development of automatic alcohol detection and to ensure a consistent acoustic environment for the alcoholized and the sober recording. The recorded speech covers a variety of contents and speech styles. Breath and blood alcohol concentration measurements are provided for all speakers. A transcription according to SpeechDat/Verbmobil standards and disfluency tagging as well as an automatic phonetic segmentation are part of the corpus. An Emu version of ALC allows easy access to basic speech parameters as well as the us of R for statistical analysis of selected parts of ALC. ALC is available without restriction for scientific or commercial use at the Bavarian Archive for Speech Signals

    A summary of the 2012 JHU CLSP Workshop on Zero Resource Speech Technologies and Models of Early Language Acquisition

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    We summarize the accomplishments of a multi-disciplinary workshop exploring the computational and scientific issues surrounding zero resource (unsupervised) speech technologies and related models of early language acquisition. Centered around the tasks of phonetic and lexical discovery, we consider unified evaluation metrics, present two new approaches for improving speaker independence in the absence of supervision, and evaluate the application of Bayesian word segmentation algorithms to automatic subword unit tokenizations. Finally, we present two strategies for integrating zero resource techniques into supervised settings, demonstrating the potential of unsupervised methods to improve mainstream technologies.5 page(s
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