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Evaluating the accuracy of HMM-based and SVM-based spotters in detecting keywords and recognizing the true place of keyword occurrence shows that the HMM-based spotter detects the place of occurrence more precisely than the SVM-based spotter. On the other hand, the SVM-based spotter performs much better in detecting
This paper presents a template-based system for speaker independent key word spotting (KWS) in continuous speech that can help in automatic analysis, indexing, search and retrieval of user generated videos by content. Extensive experiments on clean speech confirm that the proposed approach is superior to a HMM approach when applied to noisy speech with different signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) levels...
Although keyword spotting (KWS) technologies have been successfully applied to some applications, most KWS systems have a common problem of noise-robustness when applied to real-world environments. Audio-visual keyword spotting (AVKWS) using both acoustic and visual information is a solution to complementarily solve
Keyword spotting (KWS) deals with the identification of keywords in unconstrained speech, which is a natural, straightforward and friendly way for human-robot interaction (HRI). Most keyword spotters have the common problem of noise-robustness when applied to real-world environment with dramatically changing noises
measure. We evaluate the system performance in keyword recognition on the small vocabulary track of the 2nd CHiME Challenge and connected digit recognition on the AURORA-2 database. The results show that the proposed system achieves comparable results with state-of-the-art noise robust recognition systems.
input. In the two-stage recognition, the maximum a posteriori (MAP) based adaptation algorithm is used to incrementally adapt the noise model. In order to evaluate our proposed approach, a Mandarin keyword spotting system was constructed. The experimental results show our proposed method achieves a better recognition rate
The aim of the spoken term detection task is to find the occurrence of user-entered keywords in an archive of audio recordings. The kind of techniques that are used usually are vocabulary-independent, using only the acoustic information available. In this scenario, however, we rely exclusively on the acoustic model
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