


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.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














