| R. Lickley. Juncture cues to disfluency. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Spoken Language Processing, 1996. |
....speech. Hindle [1] suggested that an acoustic edit signal serves as a cue that fluent speech has been interrupted. Although no evidence for a single such cue has been found, several corpus studies have found that combinations of cues can be used to identify disfluencies with reasonable success [2, 3, 4, 5]. The editing phase consists of a spoken cue phrase like filled pauses (such as uh) discourse markers (such as you know, I mean) or explicit editing terms (such as oops) Prosody Word LM POS LM Speech Human transcription IP hypotheses Repetition pattern LM Knowledge rules Fi n a lo ....
R. J. Lickley, "Juncture cues to disfluency," in Proc. ICSLP, 1996.
No context found.
R. Lickley. Juncture cues to disfluency. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Spoken Language Processing, 1996.
No context found.
R. J. Lickley, "Juncture cues to disfluency," in Proc. ICSLP, 1996.
No context found.
R. J. Lickley, "Juncture cues to disfluency," in Proc. ICSLP, 1996.
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