2,741 research outputs found
Spatial evolution of human dialects
The geographical pattern of human dialects is a result of history. Here, we
formulate a simple spatial model of language change which shows that the final
result of this historical evolution may, to some extent, be predictable. The
model shows that the boundaries of language dialect regions are controlled by a
length minimizing effect analogous to surface tension, mediated by variations
in population density which can induce curvature, and by the shape of coastline
or similar borders. The predictability of dialect regions arises because these
effects will drive many complex, randomized early states toward one of a
smaller number of stable final configurations. The model is able to reproduce
observations and predictions of dialectologists. These include dialect
continua, isogloss bundling, fanning, the wave-like spread of dialect features
from cities, and the impact of human movement on the number of dialects that an
area can support. The model also provides an analytical form for S\'{e}guy's
Curve giving the relationship between geographical and linguistic distance, and
a generalisation of the curve to account for the presence of a population
centre. A simple modification allows us to analytically characterize the
variation of language use by age in an area undergoing linguistic change
Speech data analysis for semantic indexing of video of simulated medical crises.
The Simulation for Pediatric Assessment, Resuscitation, and Communication (SPARC) group within the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Louisville, was established to enhance the care of children by using simulation based educational methodologies to improve patient safety and strengthen clinician-patient interactions. After each simulation session, the physician must manually review and annotate the recordings and then debrief the trainees. The physician responsible for the simulation has recorded 100s of videos, and is seeking solutions that can automate the process. This dissertation introduces our developed system for efficient segmentation and semantic indexing of videos of medical simulations using machine learning methods. It provides the physician with automated tools to review important sections of the simulation by identifying who spoke, when and what was his/her emotion. Only audio information is extracted and analyzed because the quality of the image recording is low and the visual environment is static for most parts. Our proposed system includes four main components: preprocessing, speaker segmentation, speaker identification, and emotion recognition. The preprocessing consists of first extracting the audio component from the video recording. Then, extracting various low-level audio features to detect and remove silence segments. We investigate and compare two different approaches for this task. The first one is threshold-based and the second one is classification-based. The second main component of the proposed system consists of detecting speaker changing points for the purpose of segmenting the audio stream. We propose two fusion methods for this task. The speaker identification and emotion recognition components of our system are designed to provide users the capability to browse the video and retrieve shots that identify āwho spoke, when, and the speakerās emotionā for further analysis. For this component, we propose two feature representation methods that map audio segments of arbitary length to a feature vector with fixed dimensions. The first one is based on soft bag-of-word (BoW) feature representations. In particular, we define three types of BoW that are based on crisp, fuzzy, and possibilistic voting. The second feature representation is a generalization of the BoW and is based on Fisher Vector (FV). FV uses the Fisher Kernel principle and combines the benefits of generative and discriminative approaches. The proposed feature representations are used within two learning frameworks. The first one is supervised learning and assumes that a large collection of labeled training data is available. Within this framework, we use standard classifiers including K-nearest neighbor (K-NN), support vector machine (SVM), and Naive Bayes. The second framework is based on semi-supervised learning where only a limited amount of labeled training samples are available. We use an approach that is based on label propagation. Our proposed algorithms were evaluated using 15 medical simulation sessions. The results were analyzed and compared to those obtained using state-of-the-art algorithms. We show that our proposed speech segmentation fusion algorithms and feature mappings outperform existing methods. We also integrated all proposed algorithms and developed a GUI prototype system for subjective evaluation. This prototype processes medical simulation video and provides the user with a visual summary of the different speech segments. It also allows the user to browse videos and retrieve scenes that provide answers to semantic queries such as: who spoke and when; who interrupted who? and what was the emotion of the speaker? The GUI prototype can also provide summary statistics of each simulation video. Examples include: for how long did each person spoke? What is the longest uninterrupted speech segment? Is there an unusual large number of pauses within the speech segment of a given speaker
How do you say āhelloā? Personality impressions from brief novel voices
On hearing a novel voice, listeners readily form personality impressions of that speaker. Accurate or not, these impressions are known to affect subsequent interactions; yet the underlying psychological and acoustical bases remain poorly understood. Furthermore, hitherto studies have focussed on extended speech as opposed to analysing the instantaneous impressions we obtain from first experience. In this paper, through a mass online rating experiment, 320 participants rated 64 sub-second vocal utterances of the word āhelloā on one of 10 personality traits. We show that: (1) personality judgements of brief utterances from unfamiliar speakers are consistent across listeners; (2) a two-dimensional āsocial voice spaceā with axes mapping Valence (Trust, Likeability) and Dominance, each driven by differing combinations of vocal acoustics, adequately summarises ratings in both male and female voices; and (3) a positive combination of Valence and Dominance results in increased perceived male vocal Attractiveness, whereas perceived female vocal Attractiveness is largely controlled by increasing Valence. Results are discussed in relation to the rapid evaluation of personality and, in turn, the intent of others, as being driven by survival mechanisms via approach or avoidance behaviours. These findings provide empirical bases for predicting personality impressions from acoustical analyses of short utterances and for generating desired personality impressions in artificial voices
Acoustic Approaches to Gender and Accent Identification
There has been considerable research on the problems of speaker and language recognition
from samples of speech. A less researched problem is that of accent recognition. Although this
is a similar problem to language identification, diļæ½erent accents of a language exhibit more
fine-grained diļæ½erences between classes than languages. This presents a tougher problem
for traditional classification techniques. In this thesis, we propose and evaluate a number of
techniques for gender and accent classification. These techniques are novel modifications and
extensions to state of the art algorithms, and they result in enhanced performance on gender
and accent recognition.
The first part of the thesis focuses on the problem of gender identification, and presents a
technique that gives improved performance in situations where training and test conditions are
mismatched.
The bulk of this thesis is concerned with the application of the i-Vector technique to accent
identification, which is the most successful approach to acoustic classification to have emerged
in recent years. We show that it is possible to achieve high accuracy accent identification without
reliance on transcriptions and without utilising phoneme recognition algorithms. The thesis
describes various stages in the development of i-Vector based accent classification that improve
the standard approaches usually applied for speaker or language identification, which are
insuļæ½cient. We demonstrate that very good accent identification performance is possible with
acoustic methods by considering diļæ½erent i-Vector projections, frontend parameters, i-Vector
configuration parameters, and an optimised fusion of the resulting i-Vector classifiers we can
obtain from the same data.
We claim to have achieved the best accent identification performance on the test corpus
for acoustic methods, with up to 90% identification rate. This performance is even better than
previously reported acoustic-phonotactic based systems on the same corpus, and is very close
to performance obtained via transcription based accent identification. Finally, we demonstrate
that the utilization of our techniques for speech recognition purposes leads to considerably
lower word error rates.
Keywords: Accent Identification, Gender Identification, Speaker Identification, Gaussian
Mixture Model, Support Vector Machine, i-Vector, Factor Analysis, Feature Extraction, British
English, Prosody, Speech Recognition
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A language space representation for speech recognition
Ā© 2015 IEEE. The number of languages for which speech recognition systems have become available is growing each year. This paper proposes to view languages as points in some rich space, termed language space, where bases are eigen-languages and a particular selection of the projection determines points. Such an approach could not only reduce development costs for each new language but also provide automatic means for language analysis. For the initial proof of the concept, this paper adopts cluster adaptive training (CAT) known for inducing similar spaces for speaker adaptation needs. The CAT approach used in this paper builds on the previous work for language adaptation in speech synthesis and extends it to Gaussian mixture modelling more appropriate for speech recognition. Experiments conducted on IARPA Babel program languages show that such language space representations can outperform language independent models and discover closely related languages in an automatic way
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