


default search action
O-COCOSDA/CASLRE 2015: Shanghai, China
- 2015 International Conference Oriental COCOSDA held jointly with 2015 Conference on Asian Spoken Language Research and Evaluation (O-COCOSDA/CASLRE), Shanghai, China, October 28-30, 2015. IEEE 2015, ISBN 978-1-4673-8279-3

- Satoshi Nakamura:

Message of the O-COCOSDA Convener. 1 - Kaibao Hu:

Message from the conference chair. 1 - Hongwei Ding:

Message from the technical program committee chair. 1 - Yu Hu:

Keynote speech 1: Artificial intelligence needs a language cognitive revolution. 1 - Yueguo Gu:

Keynote speech 2: Ontology-supported special corpus of illocution, emotion and prosody. 1-2 - Satoshi Nakamura:

Keynote speech 3: Toward simultaneous, natural and multimodal speech-to-speech translation. 1-2 - Shrikanth S. Narayanan:

Keynote speech 4: Extraction of linguistic and paralinguistic information from audio-visual data. 1-2 - Yuichi Sato, Yosuke Kashiwagi, Nobuaki Minematsu, Daisuke Saito, Keikichi Hirose:

Noise-robust and stress-free visualization of pronunciation diversity of World Englishes using a learner's self-centered viewpoint. 1-6 - Ananlada Chotimongkol, Vataya Chunwijitra, Sumonmas Thatphithakkul, Nattapong Kurpukdee, Chai Wutiwiwatchai:

Elicit spoken-style data from social media through a style classifier. 7-12 - Benazir Mumtaz, Saba Urooj, Sarmad Hussain, Wajiha Habib:

Stress annotated Urdu speech corpus to build female voice for TTS. 13-20 - Xingfeng Li

, Masato Akagi:
Toward improving estimation accuracy of emotion dimensions in bilingual scenario based on three-layered model. 21-26 - Yurie Iribe, Norihide Kitaoka, Shuhei Segawa:

Development of new speech corpus for elderly Japanese speech recognition. 27-31 - Shweta Bansal, Shambhu Sharan

, Shyam S. Agrawal:
Corpus design and development of an annotated speech database for Punjabi. 32-37 - Rashedul Islam, Mingxing Xu, Yuchao Fan:

Chinese Traditional Opera database for Music Genre Recognition. 38-41 - Chen-Yu Chiang:

A study on adaptation of speaking rate-dependent hierarchical prosodic model for Chinese dialect TTS. 42-46 - Wenjun Duan, Yuan Jia:

Contrastive study of focus phonetic realization between Jinan dialect and Taiyuan dialect. 47-52 - Fu-Ja Kung, Pa-Hwa Lee, Yih-Ru Wang, Sin-Horng Chen, Chen-Yu Chiang:

On finding word-level break-type formation rules for mandarin read speech. 53-57 - Shanshan Fan, Ao Chen, Aijun Li:

The recognition of neutral tone across acoustic cues. 58-63 - Yi Yuan

, Aijun Li, Yuan Jia, Jianhua Hu, Balazs Surany:
Prosodic processing in developmental dyslexia: A case study in Standard Chinese. 64-68 - Jing Shu, Yirong Luo, Yang Yang, Jing Li, Difang Zhou:

English Rhythm of Guangxi Zhuang EFL learners. 69-74 - Helen Kai-Yun Chen, Wei-te Fang, Chiu-yu Tseng:

Information content, weighting and distribution in continuous speech prosody - A cross-genre comparison. 75-80 - Askar Rozi, Dong Wang, Zhiyong Zhang, Thomas Fang Zheng:

An open/free database and Benchmark for Uyghur speaker recognition. 81-85 - Tan Lee

, Wang-Kong Lam, Anthony Pak-Hin Kong
, Sam-Po Law:
Analysis of intonation patterns in Cantonese aphasia speech. 86-89 - Chao-yu Su, Chiu-yu Tseng:

Melody of Mandarin L2 English - when L1 transfer and L2 planning come together. 90-95 - Kakeru Yazawa

, Yumi Ozaki, Greg Short, Mariko Kondo, Yoshinori Sagisaka:
A study of the production of unstressed vowels by Japanese speakers of English using the J-AESOP corpus. 96-100 - Bei Wang, Caroline Féry:

Dual-focus intonation in Standard Chinese. 101-106 - Shambhu Nath Saha

, Shyamal Kr. Das Mandal:
Acoustic analysis of English lexical stress produced by native (L1) Bengali speakers compared to native (L1) English speakers. 107-112 - Ping Tang

, Lei Liu, Shanpeng Li
, Wentao Gu
:
Cross-linguistic perception of Chinese attitudes praising and blaming. 113-117 - Van Huy Nguyen, Chi Mai Luong, Tat Thang Vu:

Tonal phoneme based model for Vietnamese LVCSR. 118-122 - Yu Chen, Jin Zhang, Yanting Chen, Yu Chen, Licheng Liu, Jianguo Wei

, Jianwu Dang:
An articulatory analysis of apical syllables in Standard Chinese. 123-127 - Bijun Ling

, Jie Liang:
Tonal alignment in Shanghai Chinese. 128-132 - Tulika Basu, Arup Saha, Somnath Chandra:

Objective verification of Assamese consonants. 133-138 - Yanyan Sui

, Cuizhen Li:
Segment reduction in disyllabic words with tones in standard Chinese. 139-144 - Jue Yu, Dafydd Gibbon

:
Time Group types in Mandarin syllable annotations. 145-149 - Xijing Luo, Jinsong Zhang

, Zuyan Wang, Hang Wang:
Coda's duration on perception of mandarin syllables with alveolar/velar nasal endings by Japanese CSL learners. 150-154 - Ying Chen:

Exploring tonal effects on the perception of word-final nasals: A preliminary study in Southern Min. 155-159 - Chatchawarn Hansakunbuntheung

, Sumonmas Thatphithakkul:
Context-dependent grapheme-to-phoneme evaluation corpus using flexible contexts and Categorial Matrix. 160-165 - Shweta Sinha

, Shyam S. Agrawal, Aruna Jain:
Influence of regional dialects on acoustic characteristics of Hindi vowels. 166-171 - Bin Wu, Yanlu Xie, Jinsong Zhang

:
A comparison study on contextual modeling for estimating functional loads of phonological contrasts. 172-176 - Peng Qin:

The acoustic and auditory performances of the three Thai level tones. 177-180 - Hui Feng, Lu Zhao, Jianwu Dang:

An empirical study of phonetic transfer in English monophthong learning by Tibetan (Lhasa) speakers. 181-185 - Yanlong Zhang, Mee Sonu, Hiroaki Kato, Yoshinori Sagisaka:

Analysis on L2 learners' perception errors between geminate and singleton of Japanese consonants using loudness related parameters. 186-189 - Hong Chen, Weijmg Zhou:

An experimental study of the production of English diphthongs by Chinese college EFL learners: An acoustic perspective. 190-195 - Roxana S. Y. Fung, Brigitte Bigi

:
Automatic word segmentation for spoken Cantonese. 196-201 - Nurul Lubis, Sakriani Sakti, Graham Neubig, Tomoki Toda

, Satoshi Nakamura:
Construction and analysis of social-affective interaction corpus in English and Indonesian. 202-206 - Sahar Rauf, Asima Hameed, Tania Habib, Sarmad Hussain:

District names speech corpus for Pakistani Languages. 207-211 - Hongwei Ding, Daniel Hirst, Rüdiger Hoffmann:

Cross-linguistic prosodic comparison with OMProDat database. 212-215

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.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














