isolated word recognition
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tirthankar Banerjee ◽  
Dhanya Eledath ◽  
V Ramasubramanian

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ch. Soumya ◽  
P. Sai Ramya ◽  
Sk. Sameer ◽  
Thanniru Pavan Vinayak

Discourse acknowledgment innovation is implanted in voice-actuated steering frameworks at client call focuses, voice dialing on cell phones, and numerous other ordinary applications. A powerful discourse acknowledgment framework consolidates exactness of ID with the capacity to sift through commotion and adjust to other acoustic conditions, for example, the speaker's discourse rate and highlight. Planning a strong discourse acknowledgment calculation is an unpredictable undertaking requiring itemized information on signal preparing and measurable demonstrating. This article exhibits a work process that utilization worked in usefulness in MATLAB® and related items to build up the calculation for a secluded digit acknowledgment framework. The framework is speaker-subordinate—that is, it perceives discourse just from one specific speaker's voice.


Author(s):  
Povilas Treigys ◽  
Gražina Korvel ◽  
Gintautas Tamulevičius ◽  
Jolita Bernatavičienė ◽  
Bożena Kostek

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angeliki Altani ◽  
Athanassios Protopapas ◽  
Katerina Katopodi ◽  
George K. Georgiou

This study aimed to examine (a) the developing interrelations between the efficiency of reading individually presented words (i.e., isolated word recognition speed) and the efficiency of reading multiword sequences (i.e., word list and text reading fluency), (b) whether serial digit naming, indexing the ability to process multi-item sequences, accounts for variance in word list and text reading fluency beyond isolated word recognition speed, and (c) if these patterns of relations/effects differ between two alphabetic languages varying in orthographic consistency (English and Greek). In total, 710 Greek- and English-speaking children from Grades 1, 3, and 5 completed a serial digit naming task and a set of reading tasks, including unconnected words presented individually, unconnected words presented in lists, and sentences forming a meaningful passage. Our results showed that the relation between isolated word recognition speed and both word list and text reading fluency gradually decreased across grades, irrespective of contextual processing requirements. Moreover, serial digit naming uniquely predicted both word-list and text reading fluency in Grades 3 and 5, beyond isolated word recognition speed. The same pattern of results was observed across languages. These findings challenge the notion that individual word recognition and reading fluency differ only in text-level processing requirements. Instead, an additional component of processing multi-item sequences appears to emerge by Grade 3, after a basic level of both accuracy and speed in word recognition has been achieved, offering a potential mechanism underlying the transition from dealing with words one at a time to efficient processing of word sequences.


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