57 research outputs found

    Prosodic scoring of word hypotheses graphs

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    Prosodic boundary detection is important to disambiguate parsing, especially in spontaneous speech, where elliptic sentences occur frequently. Word graphs are an efficient interface between word recognition and parser. Prosodic classification of word chains has been published earlier. The adjustments necessary for applying these classification techniques to word graphs are discussed in this paper. When classifying a word hypothesis a set of context words has to be determined appropriately. A method has been developed to use stochastic language models for prosodic classification. This as well has been adopted for the use on word graphs. We also improved the set of acoustic-prosodic features with which the recognition errors were reduced by about 60% on the read speech we were working on previously, now achieving 10% error rate for 3 boundary classes and 3% for 2 accent classes. Moving to spontaneous speech the recognition error increases significantly (e.g. 16% for a 2-class boundary task). We show that even on word graphs the combination of language models which model a larger context with acoustic-prosodic classifiers reduces the recognition error by up to 50 %

    Phonetic and prosodic analysis of speech

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    In order to cope with the problems of spontaneous speech (including, for example, hesitations and non-words) it is necessary to extract from the speech signal all information it contains. Modeling of words by segmental units should be supported by suprasegmental units since valuable information is represented in the prosody of an utterance. We present an approach to flexible and efficient modeling of speech by segmental units and describe extraction and use of suprasegmental information

    Degradation of haloaromatic compounds

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    An ever increasing number of halogenated organic compounds has been produced by industry in the last few decades. These compounds are employed as biocides, for synthetic polymers, as solvents, and as synthetic intermediates. Production figures are often incomplete, and total production has frequently to be extrapolated from estimates for individual countries. Compounds of this type as a rule are highly persistent against biodegradation and belong, as "recalcitrant" chemicals, to the class of so-called xenobiotics. This term is used to characterise chemical substances which have no or limited structural analogy to natural compounds for which degradation pathways have evolved over billions of years. Xenobiotics frequently have some common features. e.g. high octanol/water partitioning coefficients and low water solubility which makes for a high accumulation ratio in the biosphere (bioaccumulation potential). Recalcitrant compounds therefore are found accumulated in mammals, especially in fat tissue, animal milk supplies and also in human milk. Highly sophisticated analytical techniques have been developed for the detection of organochlorines at the trace and ultratrace level
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