Prosodic word boundary detection from Bengali continuous speech

2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 747-765
Author(s):  
Tanmay Bhowmik ◽  
Shyamal Kumar Das Mandal
Author(s):  
Anne Cutler

AbstractListeners learn from their past experience of listening to spoken words, and use this learning to maximise the efficiency of future word recognition. This paper summarises evidence that the facilitatory effects of drawing on past experience are mediated by abstraction, enabling learning to be generalised across new words and new listening situations. Phoneme category retuning, which allows adaptation to speaker-specific articulatory characteristics, is generalised on the basis of relatively brief experience to words previously unheard from that speaker. Abstract knowledge of prosodic regularities is applied to recognition even of novel words for which these regularities were violated. Prosodic word-boundary regularities drive segmentation of speech into words independently of the membership of the lexical candidate set resulting from the segmentation operation. Each of these different cases illustrates how abstraction from past listening experience has contributed to the efficiency of lexical recognition.


1989 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 367-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Harrington ◽  
Gordon Watson ◽  
Maggie Cooper

Author(s):  
Muhammad Rizki Aulia Rahman Maulana ◽  
Retno Larasati ◽  
Mohamad Ivan Fanany

Author(s):  
Mohammad Reza Feizi Derakhshi ◽  
Mohammad Reza Kangavari ◽  
Elnaz Zafarani Moattar ◽  
Mahdi Aliyari Shorehdeli

2002 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 509-527 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junhyeok Shim ◽  
Dongseok Kim ◽  
Jeongwon Cha ◽  
Gary Geunbae Lee ◽  
Jungyun Seo

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