A blueprint for a comprehensive Australian English auditory-visual speech corpus

Autor: Burnham, D., Ambikairajah, E., Arciuli, J., Bennamoun, M., Best, C.T., Bird, S., Butcher, A.R., Cassidy, S., Chetty, G., Cox, F.M., Cutler, A., Dale, R., Epps, J.R., Fletcher, J.M., Goecke, R., Grayden, D.B., Hajek, J.T., Ingram, J.C., Ishihara, S., Kemp, N., Kinoshita, Y., Kuratate, T., Lewis, T.W., Loakes, D.E., Onslow, M., Powers, D.M., Rose, P., Togneri, R., Tran, D., Wagner, M., Haugh, M., Burridge, K., Mulder, J., Peters, P.
Přispěvatelé: Haugh, M., Burridge, K., Mulder, J., Peters, P.
Rok vydání: 2009
Předmět:
Zdroj: Selected proceedings of the 2008 HCSNet Workshop on Designing the Australian National Corpus
Macquarie University
University of Canberra
Haugh, M.; Burridge, K.; Mulder, J. (ed.), Selected Proceedings of the 2008 HCSNet Workshop on Designing the Australian National Corpus: Mustering Languages, 96-107. Somerville, MA, USA : Cascadilla Proceedings Project
STARTPAGE=96;ENDPAGE=107;TITLE=Haugh, M.; Burridge, K.; Mulder, J. (ed.), Selected Proceedings of the 2008 HCSNet Workshop on Designing the Australian National Corpus: Mustering Languages
University of Western Australia
Haugh, M.; Burridge, K.; Mulder, J. (ed.), Selected Proceedings of the 2008 HCSNet Workshop on Designing the Australian National Corpus: Mustering Languages, pp. 96-107
Charles Darwin University
Popis: Contains fulltext : 77549.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Large auditory-visual (AV) speech corpora are the grist of modern research in speech science, but no such corpus exists for Australian English. This is unfortunate, for speech science is the brains behind speech technology and applications such as text-to-speech (TTS) synthesis, automatic speech recognition (ASR), speaker recognition and forensic identification, talking heads, and hearing prostheses. Advances in these research areas in Australia require a large corpus of Australian English. Here the authors describe a blueprint for building the Big Australian Speech Corpus (the Big ASC), a corpus of over 1,100 speakers from urban and rural Australia, including speakers of non-indigenous, indigenous, ethnocultural, and disordered forms of Australian English, each of whom would be sampled on three occasions in a range of speech tasks designed by the researchers who would be using the corpus.
Databáze: OpenAIRE