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Location Call # Volume Status
 E-BOOK      
Author Allen, J. B., 1942-
Title Articulation and intelligibility / Jont B. Allen.
Edition First edition.
OCLC 200508SAP001
ISBN 1598290088 (electronic bk.)
ISBN/ISSN 10.2200/S00004ED1V01Y200508SAP001 doi
Publisher San Rafael, Calif. (1537 Fourth Street, San Rafael, CA 94901 USA) : Morgan & Claypool Publishers, [2005]
©2005
Description 1 electronic text (xiii, 124 pages : illustrations\.) : digital file.
LC Subject heading/s Speech perception -- Mathematics.
Speech perception -- Research -- History.
Speech, Intelligibility of.
SUBJECT Speech recognition.
Phone recogniton.
Robust speech recognition.
Context models.
Confusion matrix.
Features.
Events.
Articulation index.
System details note Mode of access: World Wide Web.
System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 115-122).
Contents Introduction -- Problem statement -- Basic definitions and abbreviations -- Modeling HSR Outline -- Articulation -- Fletcher and Galt (1950) -- French and Steinberg (1947) -- Effects of chance and context -- Miller et al circa 1947-2001 -- Transformation from the wideband SNR to the AI -- Singular value decompositions of the AM symmetric form -- Validation of the AI -- Criticisms of articulation models -- Intelligibility -- Boothroyd (1968-2002) -- Bronkhorst et al (1993) -- Truncation experiments and coarticulation, Furui (1986) -- Van Petten et al (1999) -- Discussion with historical context -- ASR versus HSR.
Restrictions Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to subscribers or individual document purchasers.
Access may be restricted to authorized users only.
Unlimited user license access
NOTE Compendex.
INSPEC.
Google book search.
Summary Immediately following the Second World War, between 1947 and 1955, several classic papers quantified the fundamentals of human speech information processing and recognition. In 1947 French and Steinberg published their classic study on the articulation index. In 1948 Claude Shannon published his famous work on the theory of information. In 1950 Fletcher and Galt published their theory of the articulation index, a theory that Fletcher had worked on for 30 years, which integrated his classic works on loudness and speech perception with models of speech intelligibility. In 1951 George Miller then wrote the first book Language and Communication, analyzing human speech communication with Claude Shannon's just published theory of information. Finally in 1955 George Miller published the first extensive analysis of phone decoding, in the form of confusion matrices, as a function of the speech-to-noise ratio. This work extended the Bell Labs' speech articulation studies with ideas from Shannon's Information theory. Both Miller and Fletcher showed that speech, as a code, is incredibly robust to mangling distortions of filtering and noise.
NOTE Google scholar.
Additional physical form available note Also available in print.
General note Part of: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science.
Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Oct. 24, 2008).
Series from website.
Permanent link back to this item
https://novacat.nova.edu:446/record=b2328519~S13

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