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Fourth IEEE Workshop on Automatic Identification Advanced Technologies (AutoID'05)
Accent Classification in Speech
Buffalo, New York
October 17-October 18
ISBN: 0-7695-2475-3
Shamalee Deshpande, University at Buffalo
Sharat Chikkerur, University at Buffalo
Venu Govindaraju, University at Buffalo
Apart form the word content and identity of a speaker; speech also conveys information about several soft biometric traits such as accent and gender. Accurate classification of these features can have a direct impact on present speech systems. An accent specific dictionary or word models can be used to improve accuracy of speech recognition systems. Gender and accent information can also be used to improve the performance of speaker recognition systems. In this paper, we distinguish between standard American English and Indian Accented English using the second and third formant frequencies of specific accent markers. A GMM classification is used on the feature set for each accent group. The results show that using just the formant frequencies of these accent markers is sufficient to achieve a suitable classification for these two accent groups.
Citation:
Shamalee Deshpande, Sharat Chikkerur, Venu Govindaraju, "Accent Classification in Speech," autoid, pp.139-143, Fourth IEEE Workshop on Automatic Identification Advanced Technologies (AutoID'05), 2005
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