Major progress is being recorded regularly on both the technology and exploitation of automatic speech recognition (ASR) and spoken language systems. However, there are still technological barriers to flexible solutions and user satisfaction under some circumstances. This is related to several factors, such as the sensitivity to the environment (background noise), or the weak representation of grammatical and semantic knowledge.Current research is also emphasizing deficiencies in dealing with variation naturally present in speech. For instance, the lack of robustness to foreign accents precludes the use by specific populations. Also, some applications, like directory assistance, particularly stress the core recognition technology due to the very high active vocabulary (application perplexity). There are actually many factors affecting the speech realization: regional, sociolinguistic, or related to the environment or the speaker herself. These create a wide range of variations that may not be modeled correctly (speaker, gender, speaking rate, vocal effort, regional accent, speaking style, non-stationarity, etc.), especially when resources for system training are scarce. This paper outlines current advances related to these topics.
International audienceThis paper briefly reviews state of the art related to the topic of speech variability sources in automatic speech recognition systems. It focuses on some variations within the speech signal that make the ASR task difficult. The variations detailed in the paper are intrinsic to the speech and affect the different levels of the ASR processing chain. For different sources of speech variation, the paper summarizes the current knowledge and highlights specific feature extraction or modeling weaknesses and current trends
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