• Title/Summary/Keyword: Multi-model Speech Recognizer

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Multi-layer Speech Processing System for Point-Of-Interest Recognition in the Car Navigation System (차량용 항법장치에서의 관심지 인식을 위한 다단계 음성 처리 시스템)

  • Bhang, Ki-Duck;Kang, Chul-Ho
    • Journal of Korea Multimedia Society
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.16-25
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    • 2009
  • In the car environment that the first priority is a safety problem, the large vocabulary isolated word recognition system with POI domain is required as the optimal HMI technique. For the telematics terminal with a highly limited processing time and memory capacity, it is impossible to process more than 100,000 words in the terminal by the general speech recognition methods. Therefore, we proposed phoneme recognizer using the phonetic GMM and also PDM Levenshtein distance with multi-layer architecture for the POI recognition of telematics terminal. By the proposed methods, we obtained high performance in the telematics terminal with low speed processing and small memory capacity. we obtained the recognition rate of maximum 94.8% in indoor environment and of maximum 92.4% in the car navigation environments.

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Isolated Word Recognition Using a Speaker-Adaptive Neural Network (화자적응 신경망을 이용한 고립단어 인식)

  • 이기희;임인칠
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Telematics and Electronics B
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    • v.32B no.5
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    • pp.765-776
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    • 1995
  • This paper describes a speaker adaptation method to improve the recognition performance of MLP(multiLayer Perceptron) based HMM(Hidden Markov Model) speech recognizer. In this method, we use lst-order linear transformation network to fit data of a new speaker to the MLP. Transformation parameters are adjusted by back-propagating classification error to the transformation network while leaving the MLP classifier fixed. The recognition system is based on semicontinuous HMM's which use the MLP as a fuzzy vector quantizer. The experimental results show that rapid speaker adaptation resulting in high recognition performance can be accomplished by this method. Namely, for supervised adaptation, the error rate is signifecantly reduced from 9.2% for the baseline system to 5.6% after speaker adaptation. And for unsupervised adaptation, the error rate is reduced to 5.1%, without any information from new speakers.

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