Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10368506 Computer Speech & Language 2014 19 Pages PDF
Abstract
Recognition experiments using an automatic speech recognizer were conducted under conditions almost identical to the experiments with humans. The performance of the acoustic models without any language model, or with only a unigram language model, were greatly inferior to human recognition performance with no context. In contrast, prediction performance using a trigram language model was superior or comparable to human performance when given a preceding and a succeeding word. These results suggest that we must improve our acoustic models rather than our language models to make automatic speech recognizers comparable to humans in recognition performance under conditions where the recognizer has limited linguistic context.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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