Publication | Closed Access
Advances in alphadigit recognition using syllables
12
Citations
7
References
2002
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringSpeech CorpusNeurolinguisticsSpoken Language ProcessingPhonologyCorpus LinguisticsSpeech RecognitionPattern RecognitionText RecognitionPhoneticsComputational LinguisticsVoice RecognitionLanguage StudiesCharacter RecognitionOptical Character RecognitionBase Syllable SystemMorphologyCrossword Triphone SystemAlphadigit RecognitionComputer ScienceSpeech CommunicationSpeech TechnologySpeech ProcessingSpeech InputSpeech PerceptionContinuous Alphadigit UtterancesLinguistics
We present a set of experiments which explore the use of syllables for recognition of continuous alphadigit utterances. In this system, syllables are used as the primary unit of recognition. This work was motivated by our need to verify and isolate phenomena seen when performing syllable-based experiments on the Switchboard corpus. The performance of our base syllable system is better than a crossword triphone system while requiring a small portion of the resources necessary for triphone systems. All experiments were performed on the OGI Alphadigits corpus, which consists of telephone-bandwidth alphadigit strings. The word error rate (WER) of the best syllable system (context-independent syllables) reported here is 11.1% compared to 12.2% for a crossword triphone system.
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