348 research outputs found

    SPEECH RECOGNITION FOR CONNECTED WORD USING CEPSTRAL AND DYNAMIC TIME WARPING ALGORITHMS

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    Speech Recognition or Speech Recognizer (SR) has become an important tool for people with physical disabilities when handling Home Automation (HA) appliances. This technology is expected to improve the daily life of the elderly and the disabled so that they are always in control over their lives, and continue to live independently, to learn and stay involved in social life. The goal of the research is to solve the constraints of current Malay SR that is still in its infancy stage where there is limited research in Malay words, especially for HA applications. Since, most of the previous works were confined to wired microphone; this limitation of using wireless microphone type makes it an important area of the research. Research was carried out to develop SR word model for five (5) Malay words and five (5) English words as commands to activate and deactivate home appliances

    Word And Speaker Recognition System

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    In this report, a system which combines user dependent Word Recognition and text dependent speaker recognition is described. Word recognition is the process of converting an audio signal, captured by a microphone, to a word. Speaker Identification is the ability to recognize a person identity base on the specific word he/she uttered. A person's voice contains various parameters that convey information such as gender, emotion, health, attitude and identity. Speaker recognition identifies who is the speaker based on the unique voiceprint from the speech data. Voice Activity Detection (VAD), Spectral Subtraction (SS), Mel-Frequency Cepstrum Coefficient (MFCC), Vector Quantization (VQ), Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) and k-Nearest Neighbour (k-NN) are methods used in word recognition part of the project to implement using MATLAB software. For Speaker Recognition part, Vector Quantization (VQ) is used. The recognition rate for word and speaker recognition system that was successfully implemented is 84.44% for word recognition while for speaker recognition is 54.44%

    Semi-continuous hidden Markov models for speech recognition

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    ASR Systems in Noisy Environment: Analysis and Solutions for Increasing Noise Robustness

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    This paper deals with the analysis of Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) suitable for usage within noisy environment and suggests optimum configuration under various noisy conditions. The behavior of standard parameterization techniques was analyzed from the viewpoint of robustness against background noise. It was done for Melfrequency cepstral coefficients (MFCC), Perceptual linear predictive (PLP) coefficients, and their modified forms combining main blocks of PLP and MFCC. The second part is devoted to the analysis and contribution of modified techniques containing frequency-domain noise suppression and voice activity detection. The above-mentioned techniques were tested with signals in real noisy environment within Czech digit recognition task and AURORA databases. Finally, the contribution of special VAD selective training and MLLR adaptation of acoustic models were studied for various signal features

    Progress in Speech Recognition for Romanian Language

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    Feature Extraction Analysis for Hidden Markov Models in Sundanese Speech Recognition

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    Sundanese language is one of the popular languages in Indonesia. Thus, research in Sundanese language becomes essential to be made. It is the reason this study was being made. The vital parts to get the high accuracy of recognition are feature extraction and classifier. The important goal of this study was to analyze the first one. Three types of feature extraction tested were Linear Predictive Coding (LPC), Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC), and Human Factor Cepstral Coefficients (HFCC). The results of the three feature extraction became the input of the classifier. The study applied Hidden Markov Models as its classifier. However, before the classification was done, we need to do the quantization. In this study, it was based on clustering. Each result was compared against the number of clusters and hidden states used. The dataset came from four people who spoke digits from zero to nine as much as 60 times to do this experiments. Finally, it showed that all feature extraction produced the same performance for the corpus used

    Effect of Time Duration and Intrinsic Features for English Phoneme Recognition

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    This paper describes methods to improve the performance of English phoneme recognition from linguistic view points. The methods include exploiting time duration information in hidden Markov model (HMM), intrinsic feature space for vowel. The time duration constraint imposed on states of the phoneme HMM can improve its recognition rate significantly for phoneme data in continuous pseech. As intrinsic feature spaces for vowel, formants and the time derivative are employed. They improve the phoneme recognition rate considerably compared with the commonly used LPC cepstral coefficients

    Physiologically-Motivated Feature Extraction Methods for Speaker Recognition

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    Speaker recognition has received a great deal of attention from the speech community, and significant gains in robustness and accuracy have been obtained over the past decade. However, the features used for identification are still primarily representations of overall spectral characteristics, and thus the models are primarily phonetic in nature, differentiating speakers based on overall pronunciation patterns. This creates difficulties in terms of the amount of enrollment data and complexity of the models required to cover the phonetic space, especially in tasks such as identification where enrollment and testing data may not have similar phonetic coverage. This dissertation introduces new features based on vocal source characteristics intended to capture physiological information related to the laryngeal excitation energy of a speaker. These features, including RPCC, GLFCC and TPCC, represent the unique characteristics of speech production not represented in current state-of-the-art speaker identification systems. The proposed features are evaluated through three experimental paradigms including cross-lingual speaker identification, cross song-type avian speaker identification and mono-lingual speaker identification. The experimental results show that the proposed features provide information about speaker characteristics that is significantly different in nature from the phonetically-focused information present in traditional spectral features. The incorporation of the proposed glottal source features offers significant overall improvement to the robustness and accuracy of speaker identification tasks
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