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Tone realisation for speech synthesis of Yorùbá / Daniel Rudolph van NiekerkVan Niekerk, Daniel Rudolph January 2014 (has links)
Speech technologies such as text-to-speech synthesis (TTS) and automatic speech recognition (ASR) have recently generated much interest in the developed world as a user-interface medium to smartphones [1, 2]. However, it is also recognised that these technologies may potentially have a positive impact on the lives of those in the developing world, especially in Africa, by presenting an important medium for access to information where illiteracy and a lack of infrastructure play a limiting role [3, 4, 5, 6]. While these technologies continually experience important advances that keep extending their applicability to new and under-resourced languages, one particular area in need of further development is speech synthesis of African tone languages [7, 8]. The main objective of this work is acoustic modelling and synthesis of tone for an African tone,language: Yorùbá. We present an empirical investigation to establish the acoustic properties of tone in Yorùbá, and to evaluate resulting models integrated into a Hidden Markov model-based (HMMbased) TTS system. We show that in Yorùbá, which is considered a register tone language, the realisation of tone is not solely determined by pitch levels, but also inter-syllable and intra-syllable pitch dynamics. Furthermore, our experimental results indicate that utterance-wide pitch patterns are not only a result of cumulative local pitch changes (terracing), but do contain a significant gradual declination component. Lastly, models based on inter- and intra-syllable pitch dynamics using underlying linear pitch targets are shown to be relatively efficient and perceptually preferable to the current standard approach in statistical parametric speech synthesis employing HMM pitch models based on context-dependent phones. These findings support the applicability of the proposed models in under-resourced conditions. / PhD (Information Technology), North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2014
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Tone realisation for speech synthesis of Yorùbá / Daniel Rudolph van NiekerkVan Niekerk, Daniel Rudolph January 2014 (has links)
Speech technologies such as text-to-speech synthesis (TTS) and automatic speech recognition (ASR) have recently generated much interest in the developed world as a user-interface medium to smartphones [1, 2]. However, it is also recognised that these technologies may potentially have a positive impact on the lives of those in the developing world, especially in Africa, by presenting an important medium for access to information where illiteracy and a lack of infrastructure play a limiting role [3, 4, 5, 6]. While these technologies continually experience important advances that keep extending their applicability to new and under-resourced languages, one particular area in need of further development is speech synthesis of African tone languages [7, 8]. The main objective of this work is acoustic modelling and synthesis of tone for an African tone,language: Yorùbá. We present an empirical investigation to establish the acoustic properties of tone in Yorùbá, and to evaluate resulting models integrated into a Hidden Markov model-based (HMMbased) TTS system. We show that in Yorùbá, which is considered a register tone language, the realisation of tone is not solely determined by pitch levels, but also inter-syllable and intra-syllable pitch dynamics. Furthermore, our experimental results indicate that utterance-wide pitch patterns are not only a result of cumulative local pitch changes (terracing), but do contain a significant gradual declination component. Lastly, models based on inter- and intra-syllable pitch dynamics using underlying linear pitch targets are shown to be relatively efficient and perceptually preferable to the current standard approach in statistical parametric speech synthesis employing HMM pitch models based on context-dependent phones. These findings support the applicability of the proposed models in under-resourced conditions. / PhD (Information Technology), North-West University, Vaal Triangle Campus, 2014
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Grapheme-based continuous speech recognition for some of the under- resourced languages of Limpopo ProvinceManaileng, Mabu Johannes January 2015 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc. (Computer Science)) -- University of Limpopo, 2015 / This study investigates the potential of using graphemes, instead of phonemes, as acoustic sub-word units for monolingual and cross-lingual speech recognition for some of the under-resourced languages of the Limpopo Province, namely, IsiNdebele, Sepedi and Tshivenda. The performance of a grapheme-based recognition system is compared to that of phoneme-based recognition system.
For each selected under-resourced language, automatic speech recognition (ASR) system based on the use of hidden Markov models (HMMs) was developed using both graphemes and phonemes as acoustic sub-word units. The ASR framework used models emission distributions by 16 Gaussian Mixture Models (GMMs) with 2 mixture increments. A third-order n-gram language model was used in all experiments. Identical speech datasets were used for each experiment per language. The LWAZI speech corpora and the National Centre for Human Language Technologies (NCHLT) speech corpora were used for training and testing the tied-state context-dependent acoustic models. The performance of all systems was evaluated at the word-level recognition using word error rate (WER).
The results of our study show that grapheme-based continuous speech recognition, which copes with the problem of low-quality or unavailable pronunciation dictionaries, is comparable to phoneme-based recognition for the selected under-resourced languages in both the monolingual and cross-lingual speech recognition tasks. The study significantly demonstrates that context-dependent grapheme-based sub-word units can be reliable for small and medium-large vocabulary speech recognition tasks for these languages. / Telkom SA
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Exploiting resources from closely-related languages for automatic speech recognition in low-resource languages from Malaysia / Utilisation de ressources dans une langue proche pour la reconnaissance automatique de la parole pour les langues peu dotées de MalaisieSamson Juan, Sarah Flora 09 July 2015 (has links)
Les langues en Malaisie meurent à un rythme alarmant. A l'heure actuelle, 15 langues sont en danger alors que deux langues se sont éteintes récemment. Une des méthodes pour sauvegarder les langues est de les documenter, mais c'est une tâche fastidieuse lorsque celle-ci est effectuée manuellement.Un système de reconnaissance automatique de la parole (RAP) serait utile pour accélérer le processus de documentation de ressources orales. Cependant, la construction des systèmes de RAP pour une langue cible nécessite une grande quantité de données d'apprentissage comme le suggèrent les techniques actuelles de l'état de l'art, fondées sur des approches empiriques. Par conséquent, il existe de nombreux défis à relever pour construire des systèmes de transcription pour les langues qui possèdent des quantités de données limitées.L'objectif principal de cette thèse est d'étudier les effets de l'utilisation de données de langues étroitement liées, pour construire un système de RAP pour les langues à faibles ressources en Malaisie. Des études antérieures ont montré que les méthodes inter-lingues et multilingues pourraient améliorer les performances des systèmes de RAP à faibles ressources. Dans cette thèse, nous essayons de répondre à plusieurs questions concernant ces approches: comment savons-nous si une langue est utile ou non dans un processus d'apprentissage trans-lingue ? Comment la relation entre la langue source et la langue cible influence les performances de la reconnaissance de la parole ? La simple mise en commun (pooling) des données d'une langue est-elle une approche optimale ?Notre cas d'étude est l'iban, une langue peu dotée de l'île de Bornéo. Nous étudions les effets de l'utilisation des données du malais, une langue locale dominante qui est proche de l'iban, pour développer un système de RAP pour l'iban, sous différentes contraintes de ressources. Nous proposons plusieurs approches pour adapter les données du malais afin obtenir des modèles de prononciation et des modèles acoustiques pour l'iban.Comme la contruction d'un dictionnaire de prononciation à partir de zéro nécessite des ressources humaines importantes, nous avons développé une approche semi-supervisée pour construire rapidement un dictionnaire de prononciation pour l'iban. Celui-ci est fondé sur des techniques d'amorçage, pour améliorer la correspondance entre les données du malais et de l'iban.Pour augmenter la performance des modèles acoustiques à faibles ressources, nous avons exploré deux techniques de modélisation : les modèles de mélanges gaussiens à sous-espaces (SGMM) et les réseaux de neurones profonds (DNN). Nous avons proposé, dans ce cadre, des méthodes de transfert translingue pour la modélisation acoustique permettant de tirer profit d'une grande quantité de langues “proches” de la langue cible d'intérêt. Les résultats montrent que l'utilisation de données du malais est bénéfique pour augmenter les performances des systèmes de RAP de l'iban. Par ailleurs, nous avons également adapté les modèles SGMM et DNN au cas spécifique de la transcription automatique de la parole non native (très présente en Malaisie). Nous avons proposé une approche fine de fusion pour obtenir un SGMM multi-accent optimal. En outre, nous avons développé un modèle DNN spécifique pour la parole accentuée. Les deux approches permettent des améliorations significatives de la précision du système de RAP. De notre étude, nous observons que les modèles SGMM et, de façon plus surprenante, les modèles DNN sont très performants sur des jeux de données d'apprentissage en quantité limités. / Languages in Malaysia are dying in an alarming rate. As of today, 15 languages are in danger while two languages are extinct. One of the methods to save languages is by documenting languages, but it is a tedious task when performed manually.Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) system could be a tool to help speed up the process of documenting speeches from the native speakers. However, building ASR systems for a target language requires a large amount of training data as current state-of-the-art techniques are based on empirical approach. Hence, there are many challenges in building ASR for languages that have limited data available.The main aim of this thesis is to investigate the effects of using data from closely-related languages to build ASR for low-resource languages in Malaysia. Past studies have shown that cross-lingual and multilingual methods could improve performance of low-resource ASR. In this thesis, we try to answer several questions concerning these approaches: How do we know which language is beneficial for our low-resource language? How does the relationship between source and target languages influence speech recognition performance? Is pooling language data an optimal approach for multilingual strategy?Our case study is Iban, an under-resourced language spoken in Borneo island. We study the effects of using data from Malay, a local dominant language which is close to Iban, for developing Iban ASR under different resource constraints. We have proposed several approaches to adapt Malay data to obtain pronunciation and acoustic models for Iban speech.Building a pronunciation dictionary from scratch is time consuming, as one needs to properly define the sound units of each word in a vocabulary. We developed a semi-supervised approach to quickly build a pronunciation dictionary for Iban. It was based on bootstrapping techniques for improving Malay data to match Iban pronunciations.To increase the performance of low-resource acoustic models we explored two acoustic modelling techniques, the Subspace Gaussian Mixture Models (SGMM) and Deep Neural Networks (DNN). We performed cross-lingual strategies using both frameworks for adapting out-of-language data to Iban speech. Results show that using Malay data is beneficial for increasing the performance of Iban ASR. We also tested SGMM and DNN to improve low-resource non-native ASR. We proposed a fine merging strategy for obtaining an optimal multi-accent SGMM. In addition, we developed an accent-specific DNN using native speech data. After applying both methods, we obtained significant improvements in ASR accuracy. From our study, we observe that using SGMM and DNN for cross-lingual strategy is effective when training data is very limited.
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Development of robust language models for speech recognition of under-resourced languageSindana, Daniel January 2020 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.(Computer Science )) -- University of Limpopo, 2020 / Language modelling (LM) work for under-resourced languages that does not consider
most linguistic information inherent in a language produces language models that in adequately represent the language, thereby leading to under-development of natural
language processing tools and systems such as speech recognition systems. This
study investigated the influence that the orthography (i.e., writing system) of a lan guage has on the quality and/or robustness of the language models created for the
text of that language. The unique conjunctive and disjunctive writing systems of isiN debele (Ndebele) and Sepedi (Pedi) were studied.
The text data from the LWAZI and NCHLT speech corpora were used to develop lan guage models. The LM techniques that were implemented included: word-based n gram LM, LM smoothing, LM linear interpolation, and higher-order n-gram LM. The
toolkits used for development were: HTK LM, SRILM, and CMU-Cam SLM toolkits.
From the findings of the study – found on text preparation, data pooling and sizing,
higher n-gram models, and interpolation of models – it is concluded that the orthogra phy of the selected languages does have effect on the quality of the language models
created for their text. The following recommendations are made as part of LM devel opment for the concerned languages. 1) Special preparation and normalisation of the text data before LM development – paying attention to within sentence text markers
and annotation tags that may incorrectly form part of sentences, word sequences, and
n-gram contexts. 2) Enable interpolation during training. 3) Develop pentagram and
hexagram language models for Pedi texts, and trigrams and quadrigrams for Ndebele
texts. 4) Investigate efficient smoothing method for the different languages, especially
for different text sizes and different text domains / National Research Foundation (NRF)
Telkom
University of Limpopo
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Effective automatic speech recognition data collection for under–resourced languages / de Vries N.J.De Vries, Nicolaas Johannes January 2011 (has links)
As building transcribed speech corpora for under–resourced languages plays a pivotal role in developing
automatic speech recognition (ASR) technologies for such languages, a key step in developing
these technologies is the effective collection of ASR data, consisting of transcribed audio and associated
meta data.
The problem is that no suitable tool currently exists for effectively collecting ASR data for such
languages. The specific context and requirements for effectively collecting ASR data for underresourced
languages, render all currently known solutions unsuitable for such a task. Such requirements
include portability, Internet independence and an open–source code–base.
This work documents the development of such a tool, called Woefzela, from the determination
of the requirements necessary for effective data collection in this context, to the verification and
validation of its functionality. The study demonstrates the effectiveness of using smartphones without
any Internet connectivity for ASR data collection for under–resourced languages. It introduces a semireal–
time quality control philosophy which increases the amount of usable ASR data collected from
speakers.
Woefzela was developed for the Android Operating System, and is freely available for use on
Android smartphones, with its source code also being made available. A total of more than 790 hours
of ASR data for the eleven official languages of South Africa have been successfully collected with
Woefzela.
As part of this study a benchmark for the performance of a new National Centre for Human
Language Technology (NCHLT) English corpus was established. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Electrical Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
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Effective automatic speech recognition data collection for under–resourced languages / de Vries N.J.De Vries, Nicolaas Johannes January 2011 (has links)
As building transcribed speech corpora for under–resourced languages plays a pivotal role in developing
automatic speech recognition (ASR) technologies for such languages, a key step in developing
these technologies is the effective collection of ASR data, consisting of transcribed audio and associated
meta data.
The problem is that no suitable tool currently exists for effectively collecting ASR data for such
languages. The specific context and requirements for effectively collecting ASR data for underresourced
languages, render all currently known solutions unsuitable for such a task. Such requirements
include portability, Internet independence and an open–source code–base.
This work documents the development of such a tool, called Woefzela, from the determination
of the requirements necessary for effective data collection in this context, to the verification and
validation of its functionality. The study demonstrates the effectiveness of using smartphones without
any Internet connectivity for ASR data collection for under–resourced languages. It introduces a semireal–
time quality control philosophy which increases the amount of usable ASR data collected from
speakers.
Woefzela was developed for the Android Operating System, and is freely available for use on
Android smartphones, with its source code also being made available. A total of more than 790 hours
of ASR data for the eleven official languages of South Africa have been successfully collected with
Woefzela.
As part of this study a benchmark for the performance of a new National Centre for Human
Language Technology (NCHLT) English corpus was established. / Thesis (M.Ing. (Electrical Engineering))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
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Extraction de corpus parallèle pour la traduction automatique depuis et vers une langue peu dotée / Extraction a parallel corpus for machine translation from and to under-resourced languagesDo, Thi Ngoc Diep 20 December 2011 (has links)
Les systèmes de traduction automatique obtiennent aujourd'hui de bons résultats sur certains couples de langues comme anglais – français, anglais – chinois, anglais – espagnol, etc. Les approches de traduction empiriques, particulièrement l'approche de traduction automatique probabiliste, nous permettent de construire rapidement un système de traduction si des corpus de données adéquats sont disponibles. En effet, la traduction automatique probabiliste est fondée sur l'apprentissage de modèles à partir de grands corpus parallèles bilingues pour les langues source et cible. Toutefois, la recherche sur la traduction automatique pour des paires de langues dites «peu dotés» doit faire face au défi du manque de données. Nous avons ainsi abordé le problème d'acquisition d'un grand corpus de textes bilingues parallèles pour construire le système de traduction automatique probabiliste. L'originalité de notre travail réside dans le fait que nous nous concentrons sur les langues peu dotées, où des corpus de textes bilingues parallèles sont inexistants dans la plupart des cas. Ce manuscrit présente notre méthodologie d'extraction d'un corpus d'apprentissage parallèle à partir d'un corpus comparable, une ressource de données plus riche et diversifiée sur l'Internet. Nous proposons trois méthodes d'extraction. La première méthode suit l'approche de recherche classique qui utilise des caractéristiques générales des documents ainsi que des informations lexicales du document pour extraire à la fois les documents comparables et les phrases parallèles. Cependant, cette méthode requiert des données supplémentaires sur la paire de langues. La deuxième méthode est une méthode entièrement non supervisée qui ne requiert aucune donnée supplémentaire à l'entrée, et peut être appliquée pour n'importe quelle paires de langues, même des paires de langues peu dotées. La dernière méthode est une extension de la deuxième méthode qui utilise une troisième langue, pour améliorer les processus d'extraction de deux paires de langues. Les méthodes proposées sont validées par des expériences appliquées sur la langue peu dotée vietnamienne et les langues française et anglaise. / Nowadays, machine translation has reached good results when applied to several language pairs such as English – French, English – Chinese, English – Spanish, etc. Empirical translation, particularly statistical machine translation allows us to build quickly a translation system if adequate data is available because statistical machine translation is based on models trained from large parallel bilingual corpora in source and target languages. However, research on machine translation for under-resourced language pairs always faces to the lack of training data. Thus, we have addressed the problem of retrieving a large parallel bilingual text corpus to build a statistical machine translation system. The originality of our work lies in the fact that we focus on under-resourced languages for which parallel bilingual corpora do not exist in most cases. This manuscript presents our methodology for extracting a parallel corpus from a comparable corpus, a richer and more diverse data resource over the Web. We propose three methods of extraction. The first method follows the classical approach using general characteristics of documents as well as lexical information of the document to retrieve both parallel documents and parallel sentence pairs. However, this method requires additional data of the language pair. The second method is a completely unsupervised method that does not require additional data and it can be applied to any language pairs, even under resourced language pairs. The last method deals with the extension of the second method using a third language to improve the extraction process (triangulation). The proposed methods are validated by a number of experiments applied on the under resourced Vietnamese language and the English and French languages.
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Automatic Annotation of Speech: Exploring Boundaries within Forced Alignment for Swedish and Norwegian / Automatisk Anteckning av Tal: Utforskning av Gränser inom Forced Alignment för Svenska och NorskaBiczysko, Klaudia January 2022 (has links)
In Automatic Speech Recognition, there is an extensive need for time-aligned data. Manual speech segmentation has been shown to be more laborious than manual transcription, especially when dealing with tens of hours of speech. Forced alignment is a technique for matching a signal with its orthographic transcription with respect to the duration of linguistic units. Most forced aligners, however, are language-dependent and trained on English data, whereas under-resourced languages lack the resources to develop an acoustic model required for an aligner, as well as manually aligned data. An alternative solution to the training of new models can be cross-language forced alignment, in which an aligner trained on one language is used for aligning data in another language. This thesis aimed to evaluate state-of-the-art forced alignment algorithms available for Swedish and test whether a Swedish model could be applied for aligning Norwegian. Three approaches for forced aligners were employed: (1) one forced aligner based on Dynamic Time Warping and text-to-speech synthesis Aeneas, (2) two forced aligners based on Hidden Markov Models, namely the Munich AUtomatic Segmentation System (WebMAUS) and the Montreal Forced Aligner (MFA) and (3) Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) segmentation algorithm with two pre-trained and fine-tuned Wav2Vec2 Swedish models. First, small speech test sets for Norwegian and Swedish, covering different types of spontaneousness in the speech, were created and manually aligned to create gold-standard alignments. Second, the performance of the Swedish dataset was evaluated with respect to the gold standard. Finally, it was tested whether Swedish forced aligners could be applied for aligning Norwegian data. The performance of the aligners was assessed by measuring the difference between the boundaries set in the gold standard from that of the comparison alignment. The accuracy was estimated by calculating the proportion of alignments below a particular threshold proposed in the literature. It was found that the performance of the CTC segmentation algorithm with Wav2Vec2 (VoxRex) was superior to other forced alignment systems. The differences between the alignments of two Wav2Vec2 models suggest that the training data may have a larger influence on the alignments, than the architecture of the algorithm. In lower thresholds, the traditional HMM approach outperformed the deep learning models. Finally, findings from the thesis have demonstrated promising results for cross-language forced alignment using Swedish models to align related languages, such as Norwegian.
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