default search action
Computer Speech & Language, Volume 28
Volume 28, Number 1, January 2014
- Alexandra Balahur, Rada Mihalcea, Andrés Montoyo:
Computational approaches to subjectivity and sentiment analysis: Present and envisaged methods and applications. 1-6 - Carmen Banea, Rada Mihalcea, Janyce Wiebe:
Sense-level subjectivity in a multilingual setting. 7-19 - Muhammad Abdul-Mageed, Mona T. Diab, Sandra Kübler:
SAMAR: Subjectivity and sentiment analysis for Arabic social media. 20-37 - Michal Ptaszynski, Rafal Rzepka, Kenji Araki, Yoshio Momouchi:
Automatically annotating a five-billion-word corpus of Japanese blogs for sentiment and affect analysis. 38-55 - Alexandra Balahur, Marco Turchi:
Comparative experiments using supervised learning and machine translation for multilingual sentiment analysis. 56-75 - Diman Ghazi, Diana Inkpen, Stan Szpakowicz:
Prior and contextual emotion of words in sentential context. 76-92 - Arturo Montejo-Ráez, Eugenio Martínez-Cámara, María Teresa Martín-Valdivia, Luis Alfonso Ureña López:
Ranked WordNet graph for Sentiment Polarity Classification in Twitter. 93-107 - Dasha Bogdanova, Paolo Rosso, Thamar Solorio:
Exploring high-level features for detecting cyberpedophilia. 108-120 - Ahilan Kanagasundaram, David Dean, Sridha Sridharan, Mitchell McLaren, Robbie Vogt:
I-vector based speaker recognition using advanced channel compensation techniques. 121-140 - Bert Réveil, Kris Demuynck, Jean-Pierre Martens:
An improved two-stage mixed language model approach for handling out-of-vocabulary words in large vocabulary continuous speech recognition. 141-162 - Guangpu Huang, Meng Joo Er:
An adaptive neural control scheme for articulatory synthesis of CV sequences. 163-176 - David Rybach, Michael Riley, Chris Alberti:
Direct construction of compact context-dependency transducers from data. 177-191 - Tomás Brychcín, Miloslav Konopík:
Semantic spaces for improving language modeling. 192-209 - Man-Hung Siu, Herbert Gish, Arthur Chan, William Belfield, Steve Lowe:
Unsupervised training of an HMM-based self-organizing unit recognizer with applications to topic classification and keyword discovery. 210-223 - Anthony P. Stark, Izhak Shafran, Jeffrey A. Kaye:
Inferring social nature of conversations from words: Experiments on a corpus of everyday telephone conversations. 224-239 - Casey Kennington, David Schlangen:
Situated incremental natural language understanding using Markov Logic Networks. 240-255 - Deana Pennell, Yang Liu:
Normalization of informal text. 256-277 - Juan Pablo Arias, Carlos Busso, Néstor Becerra Yoma:
Shape-based modeling of the fundamental frequency contour for emotion detection in speech. 278-294 - Man-Wai Mak, Hon-Bill Yu:
A study of voice activity detection techniques for NIST speaker recognition evaluations. 295-313 - Hiroki Tanaka, Nick Campbell:
Classification of social laughter in natural conversational speech. 314-325 - David Escudero Mancebo, César González Ferreras, Carlos Vivaracho-Pascual, Valentín Cardeñoso-Payo:
A fuzzy classifier to deal with similarity between labels on automatic prosodic labeling. 326-341
Volume 28, Number 2, March 2014
- Björn W. Schuller, Stefan Steidl, Anton Batliner, Florian Schiel, Jarek Krajewski:
Introduction to the Special Issue on Broadening the View on Speaker Analysis. 343-345 - Björn W. Schuller, Stefan Steidl, Anton Batliner, Florian Schiel, Jarek Krajewski, Felix Weninger, Florian Eyben:
Medium-term speaker states - A review on intoxication, sleepiness and the first challenge. 346-374 - Daniel Bone, Ming Li, Matthew P. Black, Shrikanth S. Narayanan:
Intoxicated speech detection: A fusion framework with speaker-normalized hierarchical functionals and GMM supervectors. 375-391 - Dong-Yan Huang, Zhengchen Zhang, Shuzhi Sam Ge:
Speaker state classification based on fusion of asymmetric simple partial least squares (SIMPLS) and support vector machines. 392-419 - Je Hun Jeon, Rui Xia, Yang Liu:
Level of interest sensing in spoken dialog using decision-level fusion of acoustic and lexical evidence. 420-433 - Marie-José Caraty, Claude Montacié:
Vocal fatigue induced by prolonged oral reading: Analysis and detection. 453-466 - Catherine Middag, Renee Peje Clapham, Rob van Son, Jean-Pierre Martens:
Robust automatic intelligibility assessment techniques evaluated on speakers treated for head and neck cancer. 467-482 - Bogdan Vlasenko, Dmytro Prylipko, Ronald Böck, Andreas Wendemuth:
Modeling phonetic pattern variability in favor of the creation of robust emotion classifiers for real-life applications. 483-500 - Ryunosuke Daido, Masashi Ito, Shozo Makino, Akinori Ito:
Automatic evaluation of singing enthusiasm for karaoke. 501-517 - Chi-Chun Lee, Athanasios Katsamanis, Matthew P. Black, Brian R. Baucom, Andrew Christensen, Panayiotis G. Georgiou, Shrikanth S. Narayanan:
Computing vocal entrainment: A signal-derived PCA-based quantification scheme with application to affect analysis in married couple interactions. 518-539
- Martin Cooke, Simon King, W. Bastiaan Kleijn, Yannis Stylianou:
Introduction to the Special Issue on The listening talker: context-dependent speech production and perception. 540-542
- Martin Cooke, Simon King, Maeva Garnier, Vincent Aubanel:
The listening talker: A review of human and algorithmic context-induced modifications of speech. 543-571 - Rebecca S. Tweedy, John F. Culling:
Does the signal-to-noise ratio of an interlocutor influence a speaker's vocal intensity? 572-579 - Maeva Garnier, Nathalie Henrich:
Speaking in noise: How does the Lombard effect improve acoustic contrasts between speech and ambient noise? 580-597 - Jeesun Kim, Chris Davis:
Comparing the consistency and distinctiveness of speech produced in quiet and in noise. 598-606 - Simon Alexanderson, Jonas Beskow:
Animated Lombard speech: Motion capture, facial animation and visual intelligibility of speech produced in adverse conditions. 607-618 - Emma Jokinen, Marko Takanen, Martti Vainio, Paavo Alku:
An adaptive post-filtering method producing an artificial Lombard-like effect for intelligibility enhancement of narrowband telephone speech. 619-628 - Elizabeth Godoy, Maria Koutsogiannaki, Yannis Stylianou:
Approaching speech intelligibility enhancement with inspiration from Lombard and Clear speaking styles. 629-647 - Tuomo Raitio, Antti Suni, Martti Vainio, Paavo Alku:
Synthesis and perception of breathy, normal, and Lombard speech in the presence of noise. 648-664 - Cassia Valentini-Botinhao, Junichi Yamagishi, Simon King, Ranniery Maia:
Intelligibility enhancement of HMM-generated speech in additive noise by modifying Mel cepstral coefficients to increase the glimpse proportion. 665-686 - Benjamin Picart, Thomas Drugman, Thierry Dutoit:
Analysis and HMM-based synthesis of hypo and hyperarticulated speech. 687-707
Volume 28, Number 3, May 2014
- Yu Tsao, Xugang Lu, Paul R. Dixon, Ting-Yao Hu, Shigeki Matsuda, Chiori Hori:
Incorporating local information of the acoustic environments to MAP-based feature compensation and acoustic model adaptation. 709-726 - Arulappan Milton, S. Tamil Selvi:
Class-specific multiple classifiers scheme to recognize emotions from speech signals. 727-742 - David Griol, Zoraida Callejas, Ramón López-Cózar, Giuseppe Riccardi:
A domain-independent statistical methodology for dialog management in spoken dialog systems. 743-768 - Norihide Kitaoka, Daisuke Enami, Seiichi Nakagawa:
Effect of acoustic and linguistic contexts on human and machine speech recognition. 769-787 - Jordi Porta, Fernando J. López-Colino, Javier Tejedor, José Colás:
A rule-based translation from written Spanish to Spanish Sign Language glosses. 788-811 - Pengfei Lu, Matt Huenerfauth:
Collecting and evaluating the CUNY ASL corpus for research on American Sign Language animation. 812-831
Volume 28, Number 4, July 2014
- Wael Hassan Gomaa, Aly Aly Fahmy:
Automatic scoring for answers to Arabic test questions. 833-857 - Cees H. Taal, Richard C. Hendriks, Richard Heusdens:
Speech energy redistribution for intelligibility improvement in noise based on a perceptual distortion measure. 858-872 - Paul A. Crook, Simon Keizer, Zhuoran Wang, Wenshuo Tang, Oliver Lemon:
Real user evaluation of a POMDP spoken dialogue system using automatic belief compression. 873-887 - Felix Weninger, Jürgen T. Geiger, Martin Wöllmer, Björn W. Schuller, Gerhard Rigoll:
Feature enhancement by deep LSTM networks for ASR in reverberant multisource environments. 888-902 - Raveesh Meena, Gabriel Skantze, Joakim Gustafson:
Data-driven models for timing feedback responses in a Map Task dialogue system. 903-922 - Stanislas Oger, Georges Linarès:
Web-based possibilistic language models for automatic speech recognition. 923-939 - Ming Li, Shrikanth S. Narayanan:
Simplified supervised i-vector modeling with application to robust and efficient language identification and speaker verification. 940-958 - Allan Ramsay, Iman Alsharhan, Hanady Ahmed:
Generation of a phonetic transcription for modern standard Arabic: A knowledge-based model. 959-978 - Antoine Laurent, Sylvain Meignier, Paul Deléglise:
Improving recognition of proper nouns in ASR through generating and filtering phonetic transcriptions. 979-996 - Bart Ons, Jort F. Gemmeke, Hugo Van hamme:
Fast vocabulary acquisition in an NMF-based self-learning vocal user interface. 997-1017
Volume 28, Number 5, September 2014
- Murat Saraclar, Ciprian Chelba, Bhuvana Ramabhadran:
Editorial for the special issue on spoken content retrieval. 1019-1020
- Maria Eskevich, Gareth J. F. Jones:
Exploring speech retrieval from meetings using the AMI corpus. 1021-1044 - Hung-yi Lee, Po-wei Chou, Lin-Shan Lee:
Improved open-vocabulary spoken content retrieval with word and subword lattices using acoustic feature similarity. 1045-1065 - Florian Metze, Xavier Anguera, Etienne Barnard, Marelie H. Davel, Guillaume Gravier:
Language independent search in MediaEval's Spoken Web Search task. 1066-1082 - Javier Tejedor, Doroteo T. Toledano, Dong Wang, Simon King, José Colás:
Feature analysis for discriminative confidence estimation in spoken term detection. 1083-1114 - Thomas Drugman, Paavo Alku, Abeer Alwan, Bayya Yegnanarayana:
Glottal source processing: From analysis to applications. 1117-1138 - Harri Auvinen, Tuomo Raitio, Manu Airaksinen, Samuli Siltanen, Brad H. Story, Paavo Alku:
Automatic glottal inverse filtering with the Markov chain Monte Carlo method. 1139-1155 - Gang Chen, Jody Kreiman, Abeer Alwan:
The glottaltopogram: A method of analyzing high-speed images of the vocal folds. 1156-1169 - Stefan Huber, Axel Röbel:
On the use of voice descriptors for glottal source shape parameter estimation. 1170-1194 - Carlo Drioli, Andrea Calanca:
Speaker adaptive voice source modeling with applications to speech coding and processing. 1195-1208 - Ranniery Maia, Masami Akamine:
On the impact of excitation and spectral parameters for expressive statistical parametric speech synthesis. 1209-1232 - Thomas Drugman, John Kane, Christer Gobl:
Data-driven detection and analysis of the patterns of creaky voice. 1233-1253
Volume 28, Number 6, November 2014
- Herman Kamper, Febe de Wet, Thomas Hain, Thomas Niesler:
Capitalising on North American speech resources for the development of a South African English large vocabulary speech recognition system. 1255-1268 - Ji Ming, Danny Crookes:
An iterative longest matching segment approach to speech enhancement with additive noise and channel distortion. 1269-1286 - Satoshi Kobashikawa, Taichi Asami, Yoshikazu Yamaguchi, Hirokazu Masataki, Satoshi Takahashi:
Efficient data selection for speech recognition based on prior confidence estimation using speech and monophone models. 1287-1297 - Xunying Liu, Mark J. F. Gales, Philip C. Woodland:
Paraphrastic language models. 1298-1316 - Toshifumi Tanabe, Masahito Takahashi, Kosho Shudo:
A lexicon of multiword expressions for linguistically precise, wide-coverage natural language processing. 1317-1339 - Uwe D. Reichel:
Linking bottom-up intonation stylization to discourse structure. 1340-1365
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.