
Techniques for Noise Robustness in Automatic Speech Recognition
$311.81
- Hardcover
514 pages
- Release Date
28 November 2012
Summary
Noise-Resilient Automatic Speech Recognition: Techniques for Robustness
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems are increasingly prevalent in daily life. However, performance suffers in noisy environments like cafeterias or streets, where degraded speech recordings are common. As ASR adoption grows, understanding noise reduction techniques becomes crucial for system engineers and researchers. This book offers a comprehensive overview of cutting-edge methods to enhance speech reco…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9781119970880 |
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ISBN-10: | 1119970881 |
Author: | Tuomas Virtanen, Rita Singh, Bhiksha Raj |
Publisher: | John Wiley & Sons Inc |
Imprint: | John Wiley & Sons Inc |
Format: | Hardcover |
Number of Pages: | 514 |
Edition: | 1st |
Release Date: | 28 November 2012 |
Weight: | 907g |
Dimensions: | 252mm x 175mm x 28mm |
About The Author
Tuomas Virtanen
Tuomas Virtanen, Tampere University of Technology, Finland Dr. Virtanen is a senior researcher at Tampere University of Technology. Previously, he has worked at Cambridge University, UK as a research associate. His main research contributions are in sound source separation and its application to robust speech recognition, audio content analysis, and music information retrieval. He is well-known for his work on non-negative matrix factorization based source separation, which is currently widely used in the field. He has published numerous journal and conference articles related to above topics.
Rita Singh, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Dr. Singh is the CEO of a speech-technology startup but remains an adjunct faculty of the Language Technologies Institute at Carnegie Mellon University. She has been a major contributor to the open-source CMU sphinx and is one of the main architects of the popular Sphinx4 java-based open-source speech recognition system. In addition to her work on core speech recognition technology, she has also developed several algorithms for noise compensation, and was the prime architect of CMU’s award-winning submission to the 2001 Naval Research Lab’s challenge on automatic recognition of speech in noisy environments (SPINE).
Bhiksha Raj, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Dr. Raj is an associate professor in the Language Technologies Institute and in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. He has worked extensively on robustness algorithms for speech recognition, and is very well-known for his contributions to the highly-popular VTS approach for noise compensation, as well as his contributions to missing-feature-based techniques for noise compensation. He has published extensively on and holds patents for algorithms for microphone array processing and signal separation.
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