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1
How Autism Affects Speech Understanding in Multitalker Environments
In: DTIC (2014)
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2
How Autism Affects Speech Understanding in Multitalker Environments
In: DTIC (2013)
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3
Effects of Speech Intensity on the Callsign Acquisition Test (CAT) and Modified Rhyme Test (MRT) Presented in Noise
In: DTIC (2012)
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4
Performance Assessments of Two-Way, Free-Form, Speech-to-Speech Translation Systems for Tactical Use
In: DTIC (2011)
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5
Linking Semantic and Knowledge Representations in a Multi-Domain Dialogue System
In: DTIC (2007)
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6
Conversational Telephone Speech Corpus Collection for the NIST Speaker Recognition Evaluation 2004
In: DTIC (2004)
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7
The Pragmatics of Taking a Spoken Language System Out of the Laboratory
In: DTIC (2003)
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8
A Three-Tiered Evaluation Approach for Interactive Spoken Dialogue Systems
In: DTIC (2001)
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9
Speech Intelligibility of Native and Non-Native Speech
In: DTIC (2000)
Abstract: The intelligibility of speech is known to be lower if the talker is non-native instead of native for the given language. This study is aimed at quantifying the overall degradation due to acoustic-phonetic limitations of non- native talkers of Dutch, specifically of Dutch-speaking Americans who have lived in the Netherlands 1-3 years. Experiments were performed using phoneme intelligibility and sentence intelligibility tests, using additive noise as a means of degrading the intelligibility of speech utterances for test purposes. The overall difference in sentence intelligibility between native Dutch talkers and American talkers of Dutch, using native Dutch listeners, was found to correspond to a difference in speech-to-noise ratio of approximately 3 dB. The main contribution to the degradation of speech intelligibility by introducing non-native talkers and/or listeners, is by confusion of vowels, especially those that do not occur in American English. ; Presented at the Information Systems Technology Panel (IST) Tutorial and Workshop held in Leusden, The Netherlands, 13-14 September 1999. This article is from ADA387529 Multi-Lingual Interoperability in Speech Technology (l'Interoperabilite multilinguistique dans la technologie de la parole)
Keyword: *HEARING; *PHONETICS; *SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO; *SPEECH RECOGNITION; *SPEECH TRANSMISSION; Anatomy and Physiology; COMPONENT REPORTS; DEGRADATION; ENGLISH LANGUAGE; FOREIGN REPORTS; HUMANS; INTELLIGIBILITY; NATO FURNISHED; PHONEMES; SPEECH; SYMPOSIA; TEST AND EVALUATION; Voice Communications; VOWELS; WORDS(LANGUAGE)
URL: http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADP010387
http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADP010387
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10
Acoustic-Phonetic Modeling of Non-Native Speech for Language Identification
In: DTIC (2000)
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11
Comparative Experiments on Large Vocabulary Speech Recognition
In: DTIC (1993)
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12
Dialog Structure and Plan Recognition in Spontaneous Spoken Dialog
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1993)
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13
Development of a Spoken Language System
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1992)
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14
Augmented Role Filling Capabilities for Semantic Interpretation of Spoken Language
In: DTIC (1991)
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15
Rule-Based Frequency Domain Speech Coding
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1990)
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16
Connected Digit Recognition in a Multilingual Environment
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1988)
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17
Speaker-Independent Connected Speech.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1987)
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