• Title/Summary/Keyword: consonant system

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Statistical Analysis of Korean Phonological Rules Using a Automatic Phonetic Transcription (발음열 자동 변환을 이용한 한국어 음운 변화 규칙의 통계적 분석)

  • Lee Kyong-Nim;Chung Minhwa
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2002.11a
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    • pp.81-85
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    • 2002
  • We present a statistical analysis of Korean phonological variations using automatic generation of phonetic transcription. We have constructed the automatic generation system of Korean pronunciation variants by applying rules modeling obligatory and optional phonemic changes and allophonic changes. These rules are derived from knowledge-based morphophonological analysis and government standard pronunciation rules. This system is optimized for continuous speech recognition by generating phonetic transcriptions for training and constructing a pronunciation dictionary for recognition. In this paper, we describe Korean phonological variations by analyzing the statistics of phonemic change rule applications for the 60,000 sentences in the Samsung PBS(Phonetic Balanced Sentence) Speech DB. Our results show that the most frequently happening obligatory phonemic variations are in the order of liaison, tensification, aspirationalization, and nasalization of obstruent, and that the most frequently happening optional phonemic variations are in the order of initial consonant h-deletion, insertion of final consonant with the same place of articulation as the next consonants, and deletion of final consonant with the same place of articulation as the next consonants. These statistics can be used for improving the performance of speech recognition systems.

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Speech Problems of English Laterals by Korean Learners based on the acoustic Characteristics (한국인 영어 학습자의 설측음 발화의 문제점: 음향음성학적 특성을 중심으로)

  • Kim, Chong-Gu;Kim, Hyun-Gi;Jeon, Byung-Man
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.127-138
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    • 2000
  • The aim of this paper is to find the speech problems of English Laterals by Korean learners and to contribute to the effective pronunciation education with visualizing the pronunciation. In this paper we analyzed 18 words including lateral sounds which were divided into such as: initial, initial consonant cluster, intervocalic, final consonant cluster, and final. To analyse the words we used High speed speech analysis system. We examined acoustic characteristics of English lateral spectrogram by using voice sustained time(ms), FL1, FL2, FL3. Before we started, we had expected that the result would show us that the mother tongue interfere in the final sounds because we have similar sounds in Korea. The results of our experiments showed that initially, voice sustained time showed many more differences between Korean and native pronunciation. Also, it was seen that Korean pronunciation used the syllable structure of the own mother tongue. For instance, in the case of initial consonant cluster CCVC, Koreans often used CC as a syllable and VC as another. This was due to the mother tongue interference. For this reason in the intervocalic and in the final, we saw the differences between Korean and native. Therefore we have to accept the visualized analysis system in the instruction of pronunciation.

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The syllable recovrey rule-based system and the application of a morphological analysis method for the post-processing of a continuous speech recognition (연속음성인식 후처리를 위한 음절 복원 rule-based 시스템과 형태소분석기법의 적용)

  • 박미성;김미진;김계성;최재혁;이상조
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Telematics and Electronics C
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    • v.36C no.3
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    • pp.47-56
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    • 1999
  • Various phonological alteration occurs when we pronounce continuously in korean. This phonological alteration is one of the major reasons which make the speech recognition of korean difficult. This paper presents a rule-based system which converts a speech recognition character string to a text-based character string. The recovery results are morphologically analyzed and only a correct text string is generated. Recovery is executed according to four kinds of rules, i.e., a syllable boundary final-consonant initial-consonant recovery rule, a vowel-process recovery rule, a last syllable final-consonant recovery rule and a monosyllable process rule. We use a x-clustering information for an efficient recovery and use a postfix-syllable frequency information for restricting recovery candidates to enter morphological analyzer. Because this system is a rule-based system, it doesn't necessitate a large pronouncing dictionary or a phoneme dictionary and the advantage of this system is that we can use the being text based morphological analyzer.

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Improvement of korean Braille-Code System for Automatic Reverse Braille Translation (자동 역점역을 가능하게 하는 한글점자 부호체계의 개선)

  • Kihi, Tae-Yeong;Kim, Suk-Il;Kim, Hong-Gi
    • The Transactions of the Korea Information Processing Society
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    • v.5 no.3
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    • pp.703-714
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    • 1998
  • Translation of a Korean text into a braille text causes no problem under the existing Korean braille-code System that maintains I: I correspondence between Korean characters and braille codes. However, reverse translation of a braille text into a Korean text would cause unavoidable mis-translation due to I : N correspondences between braille codes and Korean characters. The analysis shows that in Korean braille-code System, the major reasons for mis-translation are the conflicts between Korean Chosung (initial consonant) letters and numbers, between Korean Jongsung (final consonant) letters and punctuations, between Korean Jongsung (final consonant) letters and English mode delimiter codes, and overlapping use of the same braille code such as opening and closing parentheses. In this paper, we firstly established a reverse translation rule, that is to use an ordinary braille code unless the braille code causes any conflict in braille code sequences. If any ordinary braille code may cause some conflict during the reverse translation, an extended braille code that we propose in this paper must be used. In the experimentation, we cannot get any translation errors with the newly designed braille-code System compared with 25% of errors with the existing braille-code System.

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Phonetic Keyboard for International Korean Phonetic Alphabet (국제한글음성문자의 음성학적 자판배열)

  • LEE Hyun Bok;JO Unil
    • MALSORI
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    • no.39
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    • pp.43-51
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    • 2000
  • The aim of this paper is to present a phonetically oriented keyboard array for the International Korean Phonetic Alphabet (IKPA). IKPA is a phonetic alphabet devised on the basis of Hangout (Korean alphabet) (Lee, 1999). Every computer has a keyboard as its input device and the English keyboard array is hewn as 'QWERTY' system, which represents the first six letters of the second line of the keyboard. This array is a traditional one devised to protect the congestion of the keys of the mechanical typewriter. To improve the anay of the keyboard, another system named 'Dvorak' has been devised. Likewise, a serious attempt has been made by the authors to work out an efficient keyboard for IKPA representing the manner of vowel and consonant classification. In the phonetic keyboard, the consonant symbols are arranged in the left hand side according to the Place and mauler of the articulation and the vowel symbols in the right hand side according to the vowel quadrilateral.

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A Study on Data Sharing Codes Definition of Hangul in CAI Application Programs (CAI 응용프로그램 작성시 자료공유를 위한 한글 코드 체계 정의에 관한 연구)

  • Kho, Dae-Gon
    • Journal of The Korean Association of Information Education
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.138-161
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    • 1998
  • This research addresses to establish a systematic approach to design a standard Hangul code system for educational purposes in development of CAI courseware using Korean, English, and Chinese characters, which requires data exchanges and database construction. In this paper, types of Korean alphabetic code systems already in use, their representational environments and consonant/vowel order have been studied and analysed. This paper presents the requirements that the hangul code system for educational purpose needs to obtain. First, it should be able to represent all contemporary as well as ancient Korean alphabets. Second, character elements should be separable. Third, consonant/vowel order should be determined to easily retrieve and exchange data. Lastly, the code should maintain compatibility with other national codes and provide uniqueness of user-defined character codes.

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Information Theoretic Approach to Middle Korean [ß] (정보이론 기반 중세국어 'ㅸ'의 음운론적 대립에 대한 연구)

  • Park, Sunwoo
    • Korean Linguistics
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    • v.79
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    • pp.63-89
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    • 2018
  • This study explores contrastive relation among voiced bilabial fricative [${\ss}$], voiceless bilabial stop [p] and glide [w] in Middle Korean consonant system based on Probabilistic Model. Preceding researches about voiced bilabial fricative [${\ss}$] proposed two influential arguments. One is voiced bilabial fricative [${\ss}$] was an independent phoneme, the other is it was not an independent phoneme but an allophone of voiceless bilabial stop [p] in Middle Korean. This study applies Probabilistic Phonological Relationship Model (PPRM) for solving the problem of dichotomy about contrastive and allophonic relations. The analysis result of the contrastive entropy by PPRM suggests that voiced bilabial fricative [${\ss}$] was just an allophone of voiceless bilabial stop [p] or glide [w] in Middle Korean. Comparing the entropies between [p] and other consonants with the entropies between [${\ss}$] and other consonants, a continuum defined in terms of entropy reveals that [${\ss}$] in Middle Korean was more allophonic than phonemic.

Consonant-Vowel Classification Based Segmentation Technique for Handwritten Off-Line Hangul (자소 클래스 인식에 의한 off-line 필기체 한글 문자 분할)

  • Hwang, Sun-Ja;Kim, Mun-Hyeon
    • The Transactions of the Korea Information Processing Society
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    • v.3 no.4
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    • pp.1002-1013
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    • 1996
  • The segmentation of characters is an important step in the automatic recognition of handwritten text. This paper proposes the segmenting method of off-line handwritten Hangul. The suggested approach is based on the structural characteristics of Hangul. The first step extracts the local features. connected component and strokes from the imput word. In the second step we identify the class of strokes. The third segmenting step specifies WRC(White Run Column) before consonant or horizontal vowel. If the segment is longer than threshold, the system estimates segmenting columns using the consonant-vowel information and column features, and then finds a cornered boundary along the strokes within the estimated segmenting columns.

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Statistical Analysis of Korean Phonological Variations Using a Grapheme-to-phoneme System (발음열 자동 생성기를 이용한 한국어 음운 변화 현상의 통계적 분석)

  • 이경님;정민화
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.21 no.7
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    • pp.656-664
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    • 2002
  • We present a statistical analysis of Korean phonological variations using a Grapheme-to-Phoneme (GPT) system. The GTP system used for experiments generates pronunciation variants by applying rules modeling obligatory and optional phonemic changes and allophonic changes. These rules are derived form morphophonological analysis and government standard pronunciation rules. The GTP system is optimized for continuous speech recognition by generating phonetic transcriptions for training and constructing a pronunciation dictionary for recognition. In this paper, we describe Korean phonological variations by analyzing the statistics of phonemic change rule applications for the 60,000 sentences in the Samsung PBS Speech DB. Our results show that the most frequently happening obligatory phonemic variations are in the order of liaison, tensification, aspirationalization, and nasalization of obstruent, and that the most frequently happening optional phonemic variations are in the order of initial consonant h-deletion, insertion of final consonant with the same place of articulation as the next consonants, and deletion of final consonant with the same place of articulation as the next consonant's, These statistics can be used for improving the performance of speech recognition systems.

A Research on the Spoken Language in Korean Voices from Berlin: Focusing on Phonological and Morphological Features (20세기 초 베를린 한인 음원의 음운과 형태)

  • Cha, Jaeeun;Hong, Jongseon
    • Korean Linguistics
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    • v.72
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    • pp.257-282
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    • 2016
  • The aim of this paper is to research phonological and morphological features in Korean Voices from Berlin. The Korean Voices from Berlin was recorded in 1917 at Berlin by 5 Korean prisoners engaged in World War I, some of them came from North Hamgyeong Province, the others came from Pyeongan Province, therefore these data show a North Korean regional dialect. The data are composed of three materials, counting numbers, reciting scriptures and singing folksongs. The results of this research are as follows. 1) The consonant system of Korean voices is similar to standard Korean. The 19 consonants are classified according to 5 manners of articulations and 5 points of articulations. 2) The liquid /l/ has three allophones, [ɾ] appeared in an onset position, [l] in a word medial coda position or preceded by [l], [ɹ] in a word final coda position. 3) The vowel system of Korean voices is similar to early 20th Korean's. It has 8 monophthongs, /a, ʌ, o, u, ɯ, i, e, ${\varepsilon}$/. 4) The 1 to 10 numbers in Korean voices are similar to Middle-Korean numerals. 5) The genitive particle '/ɯi/의' is pronounced [i], [ɯ], [${\varepsilon}$], especially [ɯ] is appeared in Sino Korean. 6) The /l/-deletion of conjugations are similar to Middle-Korean, /l/ deletion always occurred, if [+cor] consonants are followed.