6 citations found. Retrieving documents...
F. Cummins, F. Gers, and J. Schmidhuber. Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, IDSIA, Lugano, CH, 1999.

 Home/Search   Document Details and Download   Summary   Related Articles   Check  

This paper is cited in the following contexts:
Whence and Whither Prosody in Automatic Speech.. - Batliner, Nöth.. (2001)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

.... to Table 1, we could say that we are just midways on the full exploitation of prosody as a knowledge source for ASU: topics 1 4 listed in Table 1 and in section 3 represent the core topics of prosody research conducted in larger projects; topics 5 to 8 are only dealt with sparsely until now, cf. [15, 33, 10, 29, 22]. We do not know yet whether this is because main stream research simply was not interested in these topics, or because prosody is not that important for these topics as a knowledge source. There is still plenty to do within those fields that at the moment are object of investigation, but after a ....

F. Cummins, F. Gers, and J. Schmidhuber. Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, 1999.


Schmidhuber's Lab - Turteltaub (1999)   (Correct)

....100 papers on diverse topics including fine arts [96] and the nature of surprises [97] Apparently he even founded a religion [94] Most of his articles, however, are about machines that learn from experience. I have started to compile an incomplete list of references to work by him and his lab [117, 116, 39, 50, 40, 42, 43, 41, 52, 49, 56, 44, 54, 47, 48, 51, 53, 57, 46, 68, 45, 55, 69, 64, 65, 59, 66, 58, 67, 60, 63, 61, 73, 71, 79, 70, 74, 62, 72, 75, 78, 82, 80, 76, 81, 77, 84, 89, 88, 94, 87, 85, 96, 83, 100, 86, 90, 99, 91, 93, 105, 119, 95, 92, 97, 120, 118, 98, 125, 130, 129, 126, 128, 124, 123, 122, 131, 127, 35, 34, 36, 38, 32, 33, 37, 27, 28, 25, 24, 22, 23, 15, 9, 21, 10, 16, 26, 17, 18, 6, 7, 8, 13, 11, 20, 19, 14, 12, 115, 114, 121, 30, 106, 108, 107, 29, 31, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 5, 101, 103, 104, 4, 3, 2, 1, 102]. Hopefully I ll be able to add missing entries soon. Future work will concentrate on categorizing related papers and establishing common threads. ....

F. Cummins, F. Gers, and J. Schmidhuber. Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, IDSIA, Lugano, CH, 1999.


The Work of Schmidhuber 1987-2002 - Hufnagel (2002)   Self-citation (Schmidhuber)   (Correct)

No context found.

F. Cummins, F. Gers, and J. Schmidhuber. Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, IDSIA, Lugano, CH, 1999.


Comparing Prosody Across Many Languages - Cummins, Gers, Schmidhuber (1999)   Self-citation (Cummins Gers Schmidhuber)   (Correct)

....paper in soporific monotone. But which should serve as representative of the language Strong evidence for rhythmic constraints on the intervals between the onsets of stressed syllables in English has been demonstrated in a task specifically designed to elicit rhythmic speech (speech cycling) (Cummins and Port, 1998). When subjects repeat a phrase like beg for a dime in time with a perfectly regular metronome, there are three, and only three, stable patterns, each of which corresponds to a simple 2 or 3 beat rhythm, based on the onsets of accented (stressed) syllables. Similar tendencies have since been ....

Cummins, F., Gers, F., and Schmidhuber, J. (Submitted). Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Speech Communication. Cummins, F. and Port, R. F. (1998). Rhythmic constraints on stress timing in English. Journal of Phonetics, 26(2):145--171.


Language Identification From Prosody Without Explicit.. - Fred Cummins, Felix.. (1999)   (1 citation)  Self-citation (Cummins Gers Schmidhuber)   (Correct)

....are provided in [6] The constant activity, and hence constant error, stored in the cells allows an LSTM network to retain information over indefinitely long periods of time. We used networks having three blocks, each with a single input and output gate and two cells. Full details are given in [3]. During training, networks were presented at each time step with a target (1 or 0) indicating the language being presented. A sequence was judged to have been classified correctly if the average output for the last 50 inputs (0.5 sec) was on the correct side of 0.5. After each training epoch, ....

Fred Cummins, Felix Gers, and Jurgen Schmidhuber. Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, Istituto Dalle Molle di Studi sull'Intelligenza Artificiale, Lugano, CH, 1999.


Learning to Forget: Continual Prediction with LSTM - Felix A. Gers, Jürgen.. (1999)   (4 citations)  Self-citation (Cummins Gers Schmidhuber)   (Correct)

No context found.

Cummins, F., Gers, F., and Schmidhuber, J. (1999). Automatic discrimination among languages based on prosody alone. Technical Report IDSIA-03-99, IDSIA, Lugano, CH.

Online articles have much greater impact   More about CiteSeer.IST   Add search form to your site   Submit documents   Feedback  

CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC