default search action
3rd HSCR 2019: Vienna, Austria
- Michael Pucher, Jürgen Trouvain, Carina Lozo:
Third International Workshop on the History of Speech Communication Research, HSCR 2019, Vienna, Austria, September 13-14, 2019. ISCA 2019
Regular papers 1
- Christian Huber, Benjamin Fischer, Bernhard Graf:
Corpus of Austrian dialect recordings from the 20th century - A cooperation project. 31-40 - Christoph Draxler, Jürgen Trouvain:
On principles of phonetic archiving: From paleo-phonetics to modern speech data managment. 41-47
Keynote 1
- Rüdiger Hoffmann:
"Nothing but a lung, a glottis, and a mouth" - The long way of speech synthesis. 9-28
Regular papers 2
- Carina Lozo, Jan Luttenberger, Michael Pucher:
The thought collective behind thirty years of progress in speech systems. 49-58 - Silke Berdux, Alexander Steinbeißer:
Speaking apparatus now speaking: A project at the Deutsches Museum in Munich. 59-67 - Fabian Brackhane:
A 'polyglottal' speech synthesis - Modifications for a replica of Kempelen's speaking machine. 69-78
Regular papers 3
- Takayuki Arai:
Sound sources used in speech production research with physical models of the human vocal tract. 79-84 - K. S. Nataraj, Hirak Dasgupta, Prem C. Pandey:
Early indirect techniques for estimating the vocal tract area function. 85-94 - Quintino Lopes, Elisabete Pereira:
Armando de Lacerda and experimental phonetics in the inter-war period: Scientific innovation and circulation between Portugal, Germany and Havard. 95-104 - Rainer Jäckel:
Methodological aspects of early experimental phonetics. 105-112
Regular papers 4
- Michael Ashby:
The acoustic analysis of early speech recordings. 113-122 - Angelika Braun:
From visible speech to voiceprints - The missing link. 123-136
Keynote 2
- Peter Donhauser:
From speech- and sound research to applications and products. 29
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.