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Vol. 14 No. 3 bis (1986): Montreal Symposium On Speech Recognition
Vol. 14 No. 3 bis (1986): Montreal Symposium On Speech Recognition
Full Issue
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Proceedings of the Acoustics Week in Canada
Peripheral Preprocessing In Hearing And Psychoacoustics As Guidelines For Speech Recognition
Eberhard Zwicker
1-4
Representation of The First Formant In Speech Recognition And In Models of The Auditory Periphery
Dennis H. Klatt
5-7
Application Of an Adaptive Auditory Model To Speech Recognition
Jordan R. Cohen
8-9
Speech Recognition Experiments with a Cochlear Model
Richard F. Lyon
10-11
A Spectral-Temporal Suppression Hodel for Speech Recognition
P. L. Divenyi
12-13
The Auditory Processing of Speech
Shihab A. Shamma
14-15
Using Auditory Models for Speaker Normalization in Speech Recognition
Anthony Bladon
16-17
Recognition of Words With The Help of The Seraciroise Expert System
xavier Marie, Martine Gérard, Guy Mercier
18-19
Hierarchical Recognition of French Vowels by Expert System Iroise-Serac
Anne Bonneau, Mario Rossi, Guy Mercier
20-21
Représentation D'un Lexique Pour La R.A.P.C A L'aide de Connaissances Phonologiques
J. Gispert, H. Meloni
22-23
Un Systeme D'apprentissage Symbolique Pour le Decodage Acoustico-Phonetique
J. Guizol
24-25
Un Systeme de Traitement de Connaissances Pour le Decodage Acoustico-Phonetique
H. Meloni, R. Bulot
26-27
Utilization of Multiple Units in Human And Machine Recognition of Continuous Speech---- Perceptual Evidence And A Proposal For An Asr System
H. Fujisaki, H. Udagawa, N. Kanedera
28-29
Distortion Measure Evaluation Using Synthetic Sounds And Human Perception
D. Tuffelli, H. Ye
30-31
The Syllable And Language Perception
Geoffrey S. Nathan
32-33
Preplosive F0 In The Perception of /d/-/t/ in English
K. J. Kohler
34-35
The Effect of Unstressed Affixes on Stress Beat Location in English
Robert Allen Fox, Lise Lehiste
36-37
Phonological/Phonetic Oppositions: Binary or Gradual? Some Experimental Contributions to The Current Issue Based on The Analysis of Italian Data From The Point of View of Speech Recognition.
P. Bonaventura, L. Prina Ricotti, J. Trumper
38-40
A Model of The Perceptive Phonetics, Attended by The Human Memory
S. Jordan Mishev
41-42
Syllable-Based Phonological Rules And Their Implications For Speech Recognition
Daniel Kahn
43-44
Syllable Network for Phonemic Decoding of Speech
V. Gupta, M. Lennig, J. Marcus, P. Mermelsein
45-46
Using Diphones in Large Vocabulary Word Recognition
C. Vicenzi , D. Sciarra
47-48
Experiments on The Use of Demisyllables For Automatic Speech Recognition
G. Ruske
49-50
Half-Syllabic Units For Speech Processing – an Automatic Segmentation
Mamoru Nakatsui
51-52
Definition of Recognition Units Through Two Levels of Phonemic Description
M. Cravero, R. Pieraccini, F. Raineri
53-54
Some Considerations on The Definition of Sub-Word Units For a Template- Matching Speech Recognition System
Anna Maria Colla
55-56
The Role of Structural Constraints in Auditory Word Recognition
H. C. Nusbaum, D. B. Pisoni
57-58
Syllable Structure of English Words: Implications For Lexical Access
Michiko Kosaka, Hisashi Wakita
59-60
On Acoustic Versus Abstract Units of Representation
Daniel Huttenlocher, Meg Withgott
61-62
Models of Phonetic Recognition I: Issues That Arise in Attempting to Specify a Feature-Based Strategy For Speech Recognition
Dennis H. Klatt
63-66
Models of Phonetic Recognition II: an Approach to Feature-Based Recognition
K. N. Stevens
67-68
Models of Phonetic Recognition III: The Role of Analysis by Synthesis in Phonetic Recognition
Victor W. Zue
69-70
On The Availability of Durational Cues
Thomas H. Crystal, Arthur S. House
71-72
Using Stress Information in Large Vocabulary Speech Recognition
Pierre Dumouchel, Matthew Lennig
73-74
Characterizing Formants Through Straight-Line Approximations Without Explicit Formant Tracking
S Seneff
75-76
Speech Segmenting and kinematics
J Caelen
77-79
Invariance Des Spectres De Parole Par Analyse Des Correlations Canoniques.
K. Choukri , G. Ghollet, Y. Grenier
80-81
Grammatical Components and Macro-Prosody: Quantitative Analysis Toward Statistical Correlations
G. Gaelen-Haumont
82-83
Organization of Phonemic Space Represented by The Units of Spectra and Spectral Changes
Katsuhiko Shirai, Kazunor i Mano
85-86
Speech Recognition by Use of Word Dictionary Written in Linguistic Unit
Ken iti Kido, Shozo Makino, Michio Okada, Satoshi Moriai, Tetsuo Kosaka
87-88
Durational Constraints for Network Based Connected Digit Recognition
Marcia A. Bush
89-90
Speech Recognition Based Upon a Segment Classification and Labelling Technique and Hidden Markov Model
W. A. Mahmoud, L. A. M. Bennett
91-92
The Effect of LPC Order on The Performance of Vector Quantization in Isolated-Word Recognition
W. A. Mahmoud, L. A. M. Bennett
93-94
Acoustic/Phonetic Transcription Using a Polynomial Classifier and Hidden Markov Models
Alfred Kaltenmeier
95-96
Modelisation Autoregressive Evolutive et Reconnaissance de La Parole
G. Boulianne, G. Chollet, Y. Grenier
97-98
New Non-Supervised Learning Methods for Speaker Adaptation
Osamu KaKusho, Riichiro Mizoguchi
99-100
On The Robustness of Phonetic Information In Short-Time Speech Spectra
Meg Withgott, Marcia A. Bush
101-102
Discrimination of Voiced Plosives Using Transition Properties of The LPC Cepstrum Parameters
Y Yamashita, M Yanagida, R Mizoguchi, O Kakusho
103-104
Text Input Using Speaker-Adaptive Connected Syllable Recognition
Yoichi Takebayashi, Hiroyuki Tsuboi, Shouichi Hirai, Hiroshi Matsura, Tsuneo Nitta
105-106
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