[go: up one dir, main page]

Grenié et al., 1989 - Google Patents

Acoustic-phonetic analysis of speech produced under noise and various auditory feedback

Grenié et al., 1989

Document ID
10607371930450352071
Author
Grenié M
Negro A
Publication year
Publication venue
Proc. Eurospeech 1989

External Links

Snippet

The aim of this study was to analyze some of the major acoustic-phonetic changes that occur in French when speech is produced under high levels of white noise. Acoustical analyses were made on a nineteen word vocabulary spoken by two male and one female speakers in …
Continue reading at www.isca-archive.org (other versions)

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10LSPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
    • G10L15/00Speech recognition
    • G10L15/08Speech classification or search

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Rosenberg et al. The use of cohort normalized scores for speaker verification
Adjoudani et al. Audio-visual speech recognition compared across two architectures
DE68928927D1 (en) Voice-controlled service
Varga et al. Simultaneous recognition of concurrent speech signals using hidden Markov model decomposition
Pols Three-mode principal component analysis of confusion matrices, based on the identification of Dutch consonants, under various conditions of noise and reverberation
Grenié et al. Acoustic-phonetic analysis of speech produced under noise and various auditory feedback
Jouvet et al. Automatic adjustments of the structure of Markov models for speech recognition applications
Ono et al. Speaker normalization using constrained spectra shifts in auditory filter domain
Esling et al. Analysis of pitch dependence of pharyngeal, faucal, and larynx-height voice quality settings
Cox Speaker adaptation using a predictive model
Gurgen et al. Line spectrum pair frequency-based distance measures for speech recognition
Bodden et al. A binaural selectivity model for speech recognition
Niyogi et al. Correlation analysis of vowels and their application to speech recognition
Harmegnies et al. Effects of language change on voice quality. An experimental contribution to the study of the Catalan-Castilian case
Jeanrenaud et al. Large vocabulary word scoring as a basis for transcription generation
Brondsted et al. Analysis of speaking rate variations in stress-timed languages
Harmegnies et al. Effects of language change on voice quality in bilingual speakers, corpus content effect
Li et al. Speaker recognition with temporal transition models
Fissore et al. Using grammars in forward and backward search
Forsyth et al. Duration modelling and multiple codebooks in semi-continuous HMMs for speaker verification
Heise et al. Phone and syllable segmentation by concurrent window modules
Young Use of dialogue, pragmatics and semantics to enhance speech recognition: applicability and limitations of dynamically reducing perplexity
Escalona et al. Estimation of duration models for phonemes in m exican speech synthesis
Dubois Comparison of time-dependent acoustic features for a speaker-independent speech recognition system
Poza et al. An approach to automatic recognition of keywords in unconstrained speech using parametric models