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Speech Communication, Volume 46
Volume 46, Number 1, May 2005
- Junho Park, Hanseok Ko

:
Effective acoustic model clustering via decision-tree with supervised learning. 1-13 - Olatunji O. Akande, Peter J. Murphy:

Estimation of the vocal tract transfer function with application to glottal wave analysis. 15-36 - Katrin Kirchhoff, Dimitra Vergyri:

Cross-dialectal data sharing for acoustic modeling in Arabic speech recognition. 37-51 - Natasha Warner, Roel Smits, James M. McQueen

, Anne Cutler
:
Phonological and statistical effects on timing of speech perception: Insights from a database of Dutch diphone perception. 53-72 - Debra M. Hardison:

Variability in bimodal spoken language processing by native and nonnative speakers of English: A closer look at effects of speech style. 73-93 - Ralph van Dinther, Raymond N. J. Veldhuis, Armin Kohlrausch:

Perceptual aspects of glottal-pulse parameter variations. 95-112
Volume 46, Number 2, June 2005
- Eric Fosler-Lussier, William Byrne, Daniel Jurafsky:

Editorial. 117-118 - Martine Adda-Decker, Philippe Boula de Mareüil, Gilles Adda, Lori Lamel:

Investigating syllabic structures and their variation in spontaneous French. 119-139 - Jerome R. Bellegarda:

Unsupervised, language-independent grapheme-to-phoneme conversion by latent analogy. 140-152 - Eric Fosler-Lussier, Ingunn Amdal, Hong-Kwang Jeff Kuo:

A framework for predicting speech recognition errors. 153-170 - Thomas Hain

:
Implicit modelling of pronunciation variation in automatic speech recognition. 171-188 - Timothy J. Hazen, I. Lee Hetherington, Han Shu, Karen Livescu

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Pronunciation modeling using a finite-state transducer representation. 189-203 - Stephanie Seneff, Chao Wang:

Statistical modeling of phonological rules through linguistic hierarchies. 204-216
Volume 46, Numbers 3-4, July 2005
- Keikichi Hirose, Daniel Hirst, Yoshinori Sagisaka:

Editorial. 217-219 - Yi Xu:

Speech melody as articulatorily implemented communicative functions. 220-251 - Tanja Bänziger, Klaus R. Scherer:

The role of intonation in emotional expressions. 252-267 - David House:

Phrase-final rises as a prosodic feature in wh-questions in Swedish human-machine dialogue. 268-283 - Chiu-yu Tseng, Shao-huang Pin, Yehlin Lee, Hsin-Min Wang

, Yong-cheng Chen:
Fluent speech prosody: Framework and modeling. 284-309 - Hansjörg Mixdorff, Hartmut R. Pfitzinger:

Analysing fundamental frequency contours and local speech rate in map task dialogs. 310-325 - Rolf Carlson, Julia Hirschberg, Marc Swerts

:
Cues to upcoming Swedish prosodic boundaries: Subjective judgment studies and acoustic correlates. 326-333 - Daniel Hirst

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Form and function in the representation of speech prosody. 334-347 - Gérard Bailly

, Bleicke Holm:
SFC: A trainable prosodic model. 348-364 - Jan P. H. van Santen

, Alexander Kain, Esther Klabbers, Taniya Mishra:
Synthesis of prosody using multi-level unit sequences. 365-375 - Yoshinori Sagisaka, Takumi Yamashita, Yoko Kokenawa:

Generation and perception of F0 markedness for communicative speech synthesis. 376-384 - Keikichi Hirose, Kentaro Sato, Yasufumi Asano, Nobuaki Minematsu:

Synthesis of F0 contours using generation process model parameters predicted from unlabeled corpora: application to emotional speech synthesis. 385-404 - Takeshi Saitou, Masashi Unoki

, Masato Akagi:
Development of an F0 control model based on F0 dynamic characteristics for singing-voice synthesis. 405-417 - Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, Ken Chen

, Jennifer Cole
, Sarah Borys, Sung-Suk Kim, Aaron Cohen, Tong Zhang, Jeung-Yoon Choi, Heejin Kim, Taejin Yoon:
Simultaneous recognition of words and prosody in the Boston University Radio Speech Corpus. 418-439 - Jinsong Zhang, Satoshi Nakamura, Keikichi Hirose:

Tone nucleus-based multi-level robust acoustic tonal modeling of sentential F0 variations for Chinese continuous speech tone recognition. 440-454 - Elizabeth Shriberg, Luciana Ferrer, Sachin S. Kajarekar, Anand Venkataraman, Andreas Stolcke:

Modeling prosodic feature sequences for speaker recognition. 455-472 - Björn Granström, David House:

Audiovisual representation of prosody in expressive speech communication. 473-484

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