This paper presents a new approach to phoneme recognition using nonsequential
sub--phoneme units. These units are called acoustic events and are
phonologically meaningful as well as recognizable from speech signals. Acoustic
events form a phonologically incomplete representation as compared to
distinctive features. This problem may partly be overcome by incorporating
phonological constraints. Currently, 24 binary events describing manner and
place of articulation, vowel quality and voicing are used to recognize all
German phonemes. Phoneme recognition in this paradigm consists of two steps:
After the acoustic events have been determined from the speech signal, a
phonological parser is used to generate syllable and phoneme hypotheses from
the event lattice. Results obtained on a speaker--dependent corpus are
presented.Comment: 4 pages, to appear at ICSLP'94, PostScript version (compressed and
uuencoded