Return to search

Fusion of phoneme recognisers for South African English

Thesis (MScEng (Electrical and Electronic Engineering))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Phoneme recognition systems typically suffer from low classification accuracy. Recognition
for South African English is especially difficult, due to the variety of vastly different accent
groups. This thesis investigates whether a fusion of classifiers, each trained on a specific
accent group, can outperform a single general classifier trained on all.
We implemented basic voting and score fusion techniques from which a small increase in
classifier accuracy could be seen. To ensure that similarly-valued output scores from different
classifiers imply the same opinion, these classifiers need to be calibrated before fusion. The
main focus point of this thesis is calibration with the Pool Adjacent Violators algorithm.
We achieved impressive gains in accuracy with this method and an in-depth investigation
was made into the role of the prior and the connection with the proportion of target to
non-target scores.
Calibration and fusion using the information metric Cllr was showed to perform impressively
with synthetic data, but minor increases in accuracy was found for our phoneme
recognition system. The best results for this technique was achieved by calibrating each
classifier individually, fusing these calibrated classifiers and then finally calibrating the fused
system.
Boosting and Bagging classifiers were also briefly investigated as possible phoneme recognisers.
Our attempt did not achieve the target accuracy of the classifier trained on all the
accent groups.
The inherent difficulties typical of phoneme recognition were highlighted. Low per-class
accuracies, a large number of classes and an unbalanced speech corpus all had a negative
influence on the effectivity of the tested calibration and fusion techniques. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Foneemherkenningstelsels het tipies lae klassifikasie akkuraatheid. As gevolg van die verskeidenheid
verskillende aksent groepe is herkenning vir Suid-Afrikaanse Engels veral moeilik.
Hierdie tesis ondersoek of ’n fusie van klassifiseerders, elk afgerig op ’n spesifieke aksent
groep, beter kan doen as ’n enkele klassifiseerder wat op alle groepe afgerig is.
Ons het basiese stem- en tellingfusie tegnieke ge¨ımplementeer, wat tot ’n klein verbetering
in klassifiseerder akkuraatheid gelei het. Om te verseker dat soortgelyke uittreetellings van
verskillende klassifiseerders dieselfde opinie impliseer, moet hierdie klassifiseerders gekalibreer
word voor fusie. Die hoof fokuspunt van hierdie tesis is kalibrasie met die Pool Adja-
cent Violators algoritme. Indrukwekkende toenames in akkuraatheid is behaal met hierdie
metode en ’n in-diepte ondersoek is ingestel oor die rol van die aanneemlikheidswaarskynlikhede
en die verwantskap met die verhouding van teiken tot nie-teiken tellings.
Kalibrasie en fusie met behulp van die informasie maatstaf Cllr lewer indrukwekkende
resultate met sintetiese data, maar slegs klein verbeterings in akkuraatheid is gevind vir
ons foneemherkenningstelsel. Die beste resultate vir hierdie tegniek is verkry deur elke
klassifiseerder afsonderlik te kalibreer, hierdie gekalibreerde klassifiseerders dan te kombineer
en dan die finale gekombineerde stelsel weer te kalibreer.
Boosting en Bagging klassifiseerders is ook kortliks ondersoek as moontlike foneem herkenners.
Ons poging het nie die akkuraatheid van ons basislyn klassifiseerder (wat op alle data
afgerig is) bereik nie.
Die inherente probleme wat tipies is tot foneemherkenning is uitgewys. Lae per-klas
akkuraatheid, ’n groot hoeveelheid klasse en ’n ongebalanseerde spraak korpus het almal ’n
negatiewe invloed op die effektiwiteit van die getoetsde kalibrasie en fusie tegnieke gehad.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:sun/oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/4065
Date03 1900
CreatorsStrydom, George Wessel
ContributorsDu Preez, J. A., University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Engineering. Dept. of Electrical and Electronic Engineering.
PublisherStellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Format96 p. : ill.
RightsUniversity of Stellenbosch

Page generated in 0.002 seconds