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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

A Design of Trilingual Speech Recognition System for Chinese, Arabic and Dutch

Tu, Ming-hui 10 September 2012 (has links)
Chinese as well as Arabic is one of the six official languages in the United Nations. The population of Chinese is over 1.2 billion, ranked number one in the world. Arabic, a language used in the Arab World, has a more than 2,800 year history. Her religion, culture and oil economy have been making far-reaching effects around the globe. The worldwide energy supply greatly relies on the petroleum from the Arab World. Netherland, whose official language is Dutch, has been an international trading power since ancient time. She has become an industrial giant today. Recently, European-study-abroad is getting more popular, many famous Netherland universities offer opportunities for foreign students. Therefore, it is our objective to design a trilingual speech recognition system to help us learn Chinese, Arabic and Dutch, as well as appreciate their profound history and beautiful culture. This thesis investigates the design and implementation strategies for a Chinese, Arabic and Dutch speech recognition system. A 2,699 two-syllable recorded words database is utilized as the Chinese training corpus. For the Arabic and Dutch systems, 396 and 205 common mono-syllables are selected respectively as the major training and recognition methodology. Each mono-syllable is uttered twice with tone 1 and tone 4, and ten training patterns are used for system implementation. Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients, linear predicted cepstral coefficients, hidden Markov model and phonotactics are applied as the two syllable feature models and the recognition model respectively. The correct recognition rates of 90.17%, 84.65%, and 86.69% can be reached for the 82,000 Chinese, 31,000 Arabic, and 3,600 Dutch phrase databases respectively. Furthermore, a trilingual language-speech recognition system for 300 common words, composed of 100 words from each language, is developed. A 98.67 % correct language-phrase recognition rate can be obtained. The computation time for each system is about 2 seconds.
12

A Design of Trilingual Speech Recognition System for Chinese, Hakka and Swedish

Wu, Chih-Han 10 September 2012 (has links)
According to the statistics of Summer Institute of Linguistics, USA, there are about 7,000 languages in the world. Chinese, Hakka and Swedish are all the first 100 most popular languages. Chinese is spoken in Taiwan, Mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau. Hakka is the second popular dialect in Taiwan. The population is only less than that of Taiwanese. The ancestors of Hakka are from the Han people in Honan, China. Hakka culture has been cultivated by enormous migrations since the fourth century, and transformed to represent the tradition. Taiwan and Sweden are developed, free and democratic countries, with similar level of living standard. The ancestors of Sweden are from the Germanic peoples in Northern Europe. Swedish has been also evolved and transformed by massive migrations since the ninth century, sharing the analogous evolution route with Chinese and Hakka. Therefore, it is our objective to establish a trilingual speech recognition system to help verbal communication among languages in the global economic arena. This thesis investigates the design and implementation strategies for a trilingual speech recognition system for Chinese, Hakka and Swedish. Based on their pronunciation rules, the 404 Chinese, 204 Hakka and 369 Swedish common mono-syllables are selected as the major speech training and recognition methodology. A 2,699 two-syllable words database is recorded as the Chinese training corpus. The five rounds with four tones and six rounds with two tones training strategies are used for Hakka and Swedish respectively. Correct rates of 92.29%, 90.70% and 89.09% can be reached for the 82,000 Chinese, 3,900 Hakka and 3,750 Swedish phrase database respectively. Besides, a trilingual language-speech recognition system for 300 common words, composed of 100 words from each language, is developed. A 98.67% correct language-phrase recognition rate can be obtained. The average computation time for each system is within 2 seconds.
13

A Design of Trilingual Speech Recognition System for Chinese, Turkish and Tamil

Lin, Wei-Ting 10 September 2012 (has links)
In this thesis, both Turkish and Tamil, a language spoken in southern India and Sri Lanka, are studied in addition to Mandarin Chinese. It is hoped that the history, culture, and economy behind each language can be acquainted, tasted and appreciated during the learning process. In the ancient Chinese Han and Tang Dynasties, the ¡§Silk Road¡¨ played the most magnificent role to connect among the Oriental China, the Western Turkey and the Southern India as the international trading corridor. In this modern era, Turkey and India are both the most important cotton exporting countries. Moreover, China, Turkey and India have been showing their potential to the newly emerging markets in the world. Therefore, a trilingual speech recognition system is developed and implemented to help us to learn Chinese, Turkish and Tamil, as well as to enhance our understanding to their history and culture. In this trilingual system, linear predicted cepstral coefficients, Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients, hidden Markov model and phonotactics are used as the two syllable feature models and the recognition model respectively. For the Chinese system, a 2,699 two-syllable words database is used as the training corpus. For the Turkish and Tamil systems, a database of 10 utterances per mono-syllable is established by applying their pronunciation rules. These 10 utterances are collected through reading 5 rounds of the same mono-syllables twice with tone 1 and tone 4. The correct rates of 88.30%, 84.21%, and 88.74% can be reached for the 82,000 Chinese, 30,795 Turkish, and 3,500 Tamil phrase databases respectively. The computation time for each system is within 1.5 seconds. Furthermore, a trilingual language-speech recognition system for 300 common words, composed of 100 words from each language, is developed. A 98% correct language-phrase recognition rate can be reached with the computation time less than 2 seconds.

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