1,253 research outputs found
The use of technological support in communication disorders : how development of computer-based tools can refine the treatment of motor speech disorders
The goal of this project is to
investigate new possibilities of employing interactive technologies in
the delivery of treatment for patients with Motor Speech Disorders
(MSD). Specifically, the project explores how computer-based tools can
refine current methodologies, when considering the three main phases in
the delivery of MSD treatment: (1) the preparation of treatment
programs, (2) the practicing of speech motor skills, (3) the autonomous
management of communication outside the clinic. In addressing each of
these steps, a concrete technological solution to an identified problem
is proposed, developed and evaluated.LEI Universiteit LeidenThe investigations in this dissertation were supported by a Mosaic grant by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO).Language Use in Past and Presen
The European Language Resources and Technologies Forum: Shaping the Future of the Multilingual Digital Europe
Proceedings of the 1st FLaReNet Forum on the European Language Resources and Technologies, held in Vienna, at the Austrian Academy of Science, on 12-13 February 2009
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The Challenge of Spoken Language Systems: Research Directions for the Nineties
A spoken language system combines speech recognition, natural language processing and human interface technology. It functions by recognizing the person's words, interpreting the sequence of words to obtain a meaning in terms of the application, and providing an appropriate response back to the user. Potential applications of spoken language systems range from simple tasks, such as retrieving information from an existing database (traffic reports, airline schedules), to interactive problem solving tasks involving complex planning and reasoning (travel planning, traffic routing), to support for multilingual interactions. We examine eight key areas in which basic research is needed to produce spoken language systems: (1) robust speech recognition; (2) automatic training and adaptation; (3) spontaneous speech; (4) dialogue models; (5) natural language response generation; (6) speech synthesis and speech generation; (7) multilingual systems; and (8) interactive multimodal systems. In each area, we identify key research challenges, the infrastructure needed to support research, and the expected benefits. We conclude by reviewing the need for multidisciplinary research, for development of shared corpora and related resources, for computational support and far rapid communication among researchers. The successful development of this technology will increase accessibility of computers to a wide range of users, will facilitate multinational communication and trade, and will create new research specialties and jobs in this rapidly expanding area
Recommended from our members
The Challenge of Spoken Language Systems: Research Directions for the Nineties
A spoken language system combines speech recognition, natural language processing and human interface technology. It functions by recognizing the person's words, interpreting the sequence of words to obtain a meaning in terms of the application, and providing an appropriate response back to the user. Potential applications of spoken language systems range from simple tasks, such as retrieving information from an existing database (traffic reports, airline schedules), to interactive problem solving tasks involving complex planning and reasoning (travel planning, traffic routing), to support for multilingual interactions. We examine eight key areas in which basic research is needed to produce spoken language systems: (1) robust speech recognition; (2) automatic training and adaptation; (3) spontaneous speech; (4) dialogue models; (5) natural language response generation; (6) speech synthesis and speech generation; (7) multilingual systems; and (8) interactive multimodal systems. In each area, we identify key research challenges, the infrastructure needed to support research, and the expected benefits. We conclude by reviewing the need for multidisciplinary research, for development of shared corpora and related resources, for computational support and far rapid communication among researchers. The successful development of this technology will increase accessibility of computers to a wide range of users, will facilitate multinational communication and trade, and will create new research specialties and jobs in this rapidly expanding area
Integration of Action and Language Knowledge: A Roadmap for Developmental Robotics
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Judging Ordinary Meaning
Judges generally begin their interpretive task by looking for the ordinary meaning of the language of the law. And they often end there - out of respect for the notice function of the law or deference to the presumed intent of the lawmaker.
Most everyone agrees on the primacy of the ordinary meaning rule. Yet scholars roundly bemoan the indeterminacy of the communicative content of the language of the law. And they pivot quickly to other grounds for interpretation
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