DocumentCode
353545
Title
Anchoring hypothesis and its application to tone recognition of Chinese continuous speech
Author
Zhang, Jin-Song ; Hirose, Keikichi
Author_Institution
Dept. of Inf. & Commun. Eng., Tokyo Univ., Japan
Volume
3
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
1419
Abstract
We present in this paper a new Chinese lexical tone recognition approach based on our pitch anchoring hypothesis, which suggests that the tone offset of the preceding lexical tone and the tone onset of the succeeding lexical tone serve as anchor points for the pitch heights of the onset and offset of the sandwiched lexical tone. The new approach exploits relative F0 heights between neighboring tones as important discriminating features for the lexical tones. Experimental results revealed that the new approach could increase the tone recognition accuracy greatly: above 10% (from 75.3% to 85.5%) compared with the conventional one
Keywords
natural languages; speech recognition; Chinese continuous speech; anchoring hypothesis; discriminating features; lexical tone recognition approach; pitch anchoring; pitch heights; relative F0 heights; tone offset; tone recognition; Character recognition; Frequency; Graphics; Hidden Markov models; Information processing; Natural languages; Robustness; Speech recognition; Stochastic processes; Stress;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 2000. ICASSP '00. Proceedings. 2000 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Istanbul
ISSN
1520-6149
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6293-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICASSP.2000.861859
Filename
861859
Link To Document