Publishing Service

Polishing & Checking

Journal of Zhejiang University SCIENCE C

ISSN 1869-1951(Print), 1869-196x(Online), Monthly

Exploiting articulatory features for pitch accent detection

Abstract: Articulatory features describe how articulators are involved in making sounds. Speakers often use a more exaggerated way to pronounce accented phonemes, so articulatory features can be helpful in pitch accent detection. Instead of using the actual articulatory features obtained by direct measurement of articulators, we use the posterior probabilities produced by multi-layer perceptrons (MLPs) as articulatory features. The inputs of MLPs are frame-level acoustic features pre-processed using the split temporal context-2 (STC-2) approach. The outputs are the posterior probabilities of a set of articulatory attributes. These posterior probabilities are averaged piecewise within the range of syllables and eventually act as syllable-level articulatory features. This work is the first to introduce articulatory features into pitch accent detection. Using the articulatory features extracted in this way, together with other traditional acoustic features, can improve the accuracy of pitch accent detection by about 2%.

Key words: Articulatory features, Pitch accent detection, Prosody, Computer-aided language learning (CALL), Multi-layer perceptron (MLP)


Share this article to: More

Go to Contents

References:

<Show All>

Open peer comments: Debate/Discuss/Question/Opinion

<1>

Please provide your name, email address and a comment





DOI:

10.1631/jzus.C1300104

CLC number:

TP391; TN912.34

Download Full Text:

Click Here

Downloaded:

2845

Download summary:

<Click Here> 

Downloaded:

1931

Clicked:

6847

Cited:

3

On-line Access:

2013-11-06

Received:

2013-04-22

Revision Accepted:

2013-09-29

Crosschecked:

2013-10-15

Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE, 38 Zheda Road, Hangzhou 310027, China
Tel: +86-571-87952276; Fax: +86-571-87952331; E-mail: jzus@zju.edu.cn
Copyright © 2000~ Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE