DocumentCode :
2308017
Title :
Simplifying language through error-correcting decoding
Author :
Amengual, J.-C. ; Vidal, Enrique ; Benedi, José-Miguel
Author_Institution :
Unidad Predept. de Inf., Univ. Jaume I de Castellon, Spain
Volume :
2
fYear :
1996
fDate :
3-6 Oct 1996
Firstpage :
841
Abstract :
In many speech processing tasks, most of the sentences generally convey rather simple meanings. In these tasks, the “word-recognition” problem is much more difficult than the underlying “speech understanding” problem would be. Accordingly the authors try to develop an adequate framework to focus on a properly defined “understanding” of the sentences rather than “recognizing” the (possibly) superfluous words. This can be seen to be closely related with spontaneous language understanding and disfluence modeling. In the approach, these problems are placed under the framework of error-correcting decoding (ECD). A complex task is modeled in terms of a basic stochastic grammar, G, and an error model, E (taking insertions, substitutions and deletions into account). G should account for the basic (syntactic) structures underlying this task which would convey the semantics. E should account for general vocabulary variations, speech disfluencies, word disappearance, superfluous words, and so on. Each “complex” user sentence, x, will thus be considered as a corrupted version (according to E) of some “simple” sentence y of L(G). Recognition can then be seen as an ECD process: given x, find a sentence yn of L(G) with maximum posterior probability. They introduce fast ECD techniques and adequate procedures for simultaneously training G and E and apply these ideas to a simple task with results showing the potential of the proposed approach
Keywords :
decoding; error correction; grammars; natural languages; speech recognition; basic stochastic grammar; complex user sentence; corrupted version; disfluence modeling; error model; error-correcting decoding; language simplification; semantics; sentence meaning; simultaneous training; speech disfluencies; speech processing tasks; speech understanding; spontaneous language understanding; superfluous words; vocabulary variations; word disappearance; word-recognition problem; Data mining; Decoding; Degradation; Error analysis; Industrial training; Probability; Speech processing; Stochastic processes; Viterbi algorithm; Vocabulary;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3555-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607732
Filename :
607732
Link To Document :
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