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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.
1

Prototype waveform interpolation based low bit rate speech coding

Yaghmaie, Khashayar January 1997 (has links)
Advances in digital technology in the last decade have motivated the development of very efficient and high quality speech compression algorithms. While in the early low bit rate coding systems, the main target was production of intelligible speech at low information rates, expansion of new applications such as mobile satellite systems increased the demand for high quality speech at lowest possible bit rates. This resulted in the development of efficient parametric models for speech production system. These models were the basis of powerful speech compression algorithms such as CELP and Multiband excitation. CELP is a very efficient algorithm at medium bit rates and has achieved almost toll quality at 8 kb/s. However, the performance of CELP rapidly reduces at bit rates below 4.8 kb/s. The sinusoidal based coding algorithms and in particular multiband excitation technique have proved their abilities in producing high quality speech at bit rates below 5 kb/s. In recent years, another efficient speech compression algorithm called prototype waveform interpolation (PWI) has emerged. PWI presented a novel model which proved to be very efficient in removing redundant information from speech. While the early PWI systems produced high quality speech at bit rates around 3.5 kb/s, its latest versions produce an even higher quality at the bit rates as low as 2.4 kb/s. The key to the success of PWI is the approach it exploits in reducing the distortion associated with low bit rate coding algorithms. However, the price for this achievement is a very high computational demand which has been the main hurdle in its real time applications. The aim of the research in this thesis is the development of low complexity PWI systems without sacrificing the high quality. While the target of the majority of PWI systems is efficient coding of the excitation signal in the LP model of speech, this research focuses on exploiting PWI to directly encode the original speech. In the first part of the thesis, basic techniques in low bit rate speech coding are described and proper tools are developed to be exploited in a PWI based coding system. In the second part, the original PWI algorithm operating in the LP residual domain is briefly explained and application of PWI in speech domain is introduced as a method to cope with problems associated with the original PWI. To demonstrate the abilities of this approach, various coding schemes operating in the range of 1.85 to 2.95 kb/s are developed. In the final stage, a new technique which combines the two powerful low bit rate coding techniques, i.e multiband excitation and PWI, is developed to produce high quality synthetic speech at 2.6 kb/s.
2

Effect of Rate of Compression and Mode of Presentation on the Comprehension of a Recorded Communication to Junior College Students of Varying Aptitudes

Parker, Clement Cordell, 1940- 06 1900 (has links)
The problem of this study was to assess the desirability and practicality of utilizing compressed speech as an instructional technique within a junior college setting.
3

Comparison of CELP speech coder with a wavelet method

Nagaswamy, Sriram 01 January 2006 (has links)
This thesis compares the speech quality of Code Excited Linear Predictor (CELP, Federal Standard 1016) speech coder with a new wavelet method to compress speech. The performances of both are compared by performing subjective listening tests. The test signals used are clean signals (i.e. with no background noise), speech signals with room noise and speech signals with artificial noise added. Results indicate that for clean signals and signals with predominantly voiced components the CELP standard performs better than the wavelet method but for signals with room noise the wavelet method performs much better than the CELP. For signals with artificial noise added, the results are mixed depending on the level of artificial noise added with CELP performing better for low level noise added signals and the wavelet method performing better for higher noise levels.
4

Vývojové tendence v ruské teorii tlumočení na přelomu 20.a 21.století (teoretická studie) / Development trends in Russian interpreting theory at the turn of the 20th and 21th centuries

Mistryukova, Ekaterina January 2014 (has links)
The present Master's thesis Development trends in Russian interpreting theory at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries is a theoretical study dedicated to the current situation in the interpreting theory in the Russian Federation. The aim of the thesis is firstly to analyze the information available on the development of the Russian interpreting theory within the international context, research being carried out by the current Russian authors, universities providing education in both conference consecutive and simultaneous interpreting, professional organizations associating highly-qualified translators and interpreters, professional journals, and the situation on the market in the field of interpreting, and secondly to draw a conclusion regarding the overall present situation, its probable reasons and assumed future development. Besides the introductory and conclusive chapters, the thesis is divided into four parts. The first part describes the research resources of the Russian interpreting theory in the international interpreting studies context. The second part is focused on the main research fields of interest of the Russian authors in the initial formation phase of the interpreting theory as an independent scientific discipline. The object of the third part is a comparison of several...

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