Recently a two step strategy for large vocabulary isolated word recognition has been successfully experimented. The first step consists in the hypothesization of a reduced set of word candidates on the basis of broad bottom-up features, while the second one is the verification of the hypotheses using more detailed phonetic knowledge. This paper deals with its extension to continuous speech. A tight integration between the two steps rather than a hierarchical approach has been investigated. The hypothesization and the verification modules are implemented as processes running in parallel. Both processes represent lexical knowledge by a tree. Each node of the hypothesization tree is labeled by one of 6 broad phonetic classes. The nodes of the verification tree are, instead, the states of sub-word HMMs. The two processes cooperate to detect word hypotheses along the sentence
Interaction between fast lexical access and word verification in large vocabulary continuous speech recognition / L., Fissore; Laface, Pietro; G., Micca; R., Pieraccini. - STAMPA. - (1988), pp. 279-282. (Intervento presentato al convegno International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, ICASSP-88 tenutosi a New York (USA) nel 1988) [10.1109/ICASSP.1988.196570].
Interaction between fast lexical access and word verification in large vocabulary continuous speech recognition
LAFACE, Pietro;
1988
Abstract
Recently a two step strategy for large vocabulary isolated word recognition has been successfully experimented. The first step consists in the hypothesization of a reduced set of word candidates on the basis of broad bottom-up features, while the second one is the verification of the hypotheses using more detailed phonetic knowledge. This paper deals with its extension to continuous speech. A tight integration between the two steps rather than a hierarchical approach has been investigated. The hypothesization and the verification modules are implemented as processes running in parallel. Both processes represent lexical knowledge by a tree. Each node of the hypothesization tree is labeled by one of 6 broad phonetic classes. The nodes of the verification tree are, instead, the states of sub-word HMMs. The two processes cooperate to detect word hypotheses along the sentencePubblicazioni consigliate
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2584460
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