Publication | Closed Access
The MITLL NIST LRE 2011 language recognition system.
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
EngineeringSpoken Language ProcessingLanguage ProcessingSpeech RecognitionNatural Language ProcessingMit Lincoln LaboratoryPattern RecognitionComputational LinguisticsRobust Speech RecognitionAutomatic RecognitionLanguage Recognition SystemCorpus AnalysisLanguage StudiesSpoken Language UnderstandingLanguage Recognition EvaluationComputer ScienceLanguage RecognitionSpeech ProcessingSpeech InputSpeech PerceptionLinguistics
This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory (MITLL) language recognition system developed for the NIST 2011 Language Recognition Evaluation (LRE). The submitted system consisted of a fusion of four core classifiers, three based on spectral similarity and one based on tokenization. Additional system improvements were achieved following the submission deadline. In a major departure from previous evaluations, the 2011 LRE task focused on closed-set pairwise performance so as to emphasize a system’s ability to distinguish confusable language pairs. Results are presented for the 24-language confusable pair task at test utterance durations of 30, 10, and 3 seconds. Results are also shown using the standard detection metrics (DET, minDCF) and it is demonstrated the previous metrics adequately cover difficult pair performance. On the 30 s 24-language confusable pair task, the submitted and post-evaluation systems achieved average costs of 0.079 and 0.070 and standard detection costs of 0.038 and 0.033.
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