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This handbook provides easy access to current practice and
requirements in the main spoken language technologies.
The handbook "Technical Communication" brings together a variety of
topics which range from the role of technical media in human
communication to the linguistic, multimodal enhancement of
present-day technologies. It covers the area of computer-mediated
text, voice and multimedia communication as well as of technical
documentation. In doing so, the handbook takes professional and
private communication into account. Special emphasis is put on
technical communication by means of web 2.0 technologies and its
standardization and evaluation in system development. In summary,
the handbook deals with theoretical issues of technical
communication and its practical impact on the development and usage
of text and speech technologies.
Dictation systems, read-aloud software for the blind, speech
control of machinery, geographical information systems with speech
input and output, and educational software with talking head'
artificial tutorial agents are already on the market. The field is
expanding rapidly, and new methods and applications emerge almost
daily. But good sources of systematic information have not kept
pace with the body of information needed for development and
evaluation of these systems. Much of this information is widely
scattered through speech and acoustic engineering, linguistics,
phonetics, and experimental psychology.The Handbook of Multimodal
and Spoken Dialogue Systems presents current and developing best
practice in resource creation for speech input/output software and
hardware. This volume brings experts in these fields together to
give detailed how to' information and recommendations on planning
spoken dialogue systems, designing and evaluating audiovisual and
multimodal systems, and evaluating consumer off-the-shelf
products.In addition to standard terminology in the field, the
following topics are covered in depth: How to collect high quality
data for designing, training, and evaluating multimodal and speech
dialogue systems; How to evaluate real-life computer systems with
speech input and output; How to describe and model human-computer
dialogue precisely and in depth.Also included: A fully searchable
CD-ROM containing a hypertext version of the book in HTML format
for fast look-up of specific points, convenient desktop use, and
lightweight mobile reference; and The first systematic medium-scale
compendium of terminology with definitions.This handbook has been
especially designed for theneeds of development engineers,
decision-makers, researchers, and advanced level students in the
fields of speech technology, multimodal interfaces, multimedia,
computational linguistics, and phonetics.
This book offers a state-of-the-art survey of methods and
techniques for structuring, acquiring and maintaining lexical
resources for speech and language processing. The first chapter
provides a broad survey of the field of computational lexicography,
introducing most of the issues, terms and topics which are
addressed in more detail in the rest of the book. The next two
chapters focus on the structure and the content of man-made
lexicons, concentrating respectively on (morpho-)syntactic and
(morpho-)phonological information. Both chapters adopt a
declarative constraint-based methodology and pay ample attention to
the various ways in which lexical generalizations can be formalized
and exploited to enhance the consistency and to reduce the
redundancy of lexicons. A complementary perspective is offered in
the next two chapters, which present techniques for automatically
deriving lexical resources from text corpora. These chapters adopt
an inductive data-oriented methodology and focus also on methods
for tokenization, lemmatization and shallow parsing. The next three
chapters focus on speech applications, more specifically on the
organization of speech data bases, and on the use of lexica in
speech synthesis and speech recognition. The last chapter takes a
psycholinguistic perspective and addresses the relation between
storage and computation in the mental lexicon. The relevance of
these topics for speech and language processing is obvious, for
since NLP systems need large lexica in order to achieve reasonable
coverage, and since the construction and maintenance of large-size
lexical resources is a complex and costly task, it is of crucial
importance for those who design or build such systems to be aware
of the latest developments in this fast-moving field. The intended
audience for this book includes advanced students and professional
scientists working in the areas of computational linguistics and
language and speech technology.
Dictation systems, read-aloud software for the blind, speech
control of machinery, geographical information systems with speech
input and output, and educational software with 'talking head'
artificial tutorial agents are already on the market. The field is
expanding rapidly, and new methods and applications emerge almost
daily. But good sources of systematic information have not kept
pace with the body of information needed for development and
evaluation of these systems. Much of this information is widely
scattered through speech and acoustic engineering, linguistics,
phonetics, and experimental psychology. The Handbook of Multimodal
and Spoken Dialogue Systems presents current and developing best
practice in resource creation for speech input/output software and
hardware. This volume brings experts in these fields together to
give detailed 'how to' information and recommendations on planning
spoken dialogue systems, designing and evaluating audiovisual and
multimodal systems, and evaluating consumer off-the-shelf
products.In addition to standard terminology in the field, the
following topics are covered in depth: * How to collect high
quality data for designing, training, and evaluating multimodal and
speech dialogue systems; * How to evaluate real-life computer
systems with speech input and output; * How to describe and model
human-computer dialogue precisely and in depth. Also included: *
The first systematic medium-scale compendium of terminology with
definitions. This handbook has been especially designed for the
needs of development engineers, decision-makers, researchers, and
advanced level students in the fields of speech technology,
multimodal interfaces, multimedia, computational linguistics, and
phonetics.
This book offers a state-of-the-art survey of methods and
techniques for structuring, acquiring and maintaining lexical
resources for speech and language processing. The first chapter
provides a broad survey of the field of computational lexicography,
introducing most of the issues, terms and topics which are
addressed in more detail in the rest of the book. The next two
chapters focus on the structure and the content of man-made
lexicons, concentrating respectively on (morpho-)syntactic and
(morpho-)phonological information. Both chapters adopt a
declarative constraint-based methodology and pay ample attention to
the various ways in which lexical generalizations can be formalized
and exploited to enhance the consistency and to reduce the
redundancy of lexicons. A complementary perspective is offered in
the next two chapters, which present techniques for automatically
deriving lexical resources from text corpora. These chapters adopt
an inductive data-oriented methodology and focus also on methods
for tokenization, lemmatization and shallow parsing. The next three
chapters focus on speech applications, more specifically on the
organization of speech data bases, and on the use of lexica in
speech synthesis and speech recognition. The last chapter takes a
psycholinguistic perspective and addresses the relation between
storage and computation in the mental lexicon. The relevance of
these topics for speech and language processing is obvious, for
since NLP systems need large lexica in order to achieve reasonable
coverage, and since the construction and maintenance of large-size
lexical resources is a complex and costly task, it is of crucial
importance for those who design or build such systems to be aware
of the latest developments in this fast-moving field. The intended
audience for this book includes advanced students and professional
scientists working in the areas of computational linguistics and
language and speech technology.
This work offers a survey of methods and techniques for
structuring, acquiring and maintaining lexical resources for speech
and language processing. The first chapter provides a broad survey
of the field of computational lexicography, introducing most of the
issues, terms and topics which are addressed in more detail in the
rest of the book. The next two chapters focus on the structure and
the content of man-made lexicons, concentrating respectively on
(morpho-)syntactic and (morpho-)phonological information. Both
chapters adopt a declarative constraint-based methodology and pay
ample attention to the various ways in which lexical
generalizations can be formalized and exploited to enhance the
consistency and to reduce the redundancy of lexicons. A
complementary perspective is offered in the next two chapters,
which present techniques for automatically deriving lexical
resources from text corpora. These chapters adopt an inductive
data-oriented methodology and focus also on methods for
tokenization, lemmatization and shallow parsing. The next three
chapters focus on speech synthesis and speech recognition. The last
chapter takes a psycholinguistic perspective and addresses the
relation between storage and computation in the mental lexicon. The
work should be helpful for advanced students and professional
scientists working in the areas of computational linguistics and
language and speech technology.
This volume presents papers in English and German looking at the
area of language processing and speech technology. The following
subjects were discussed: modelling, cognition, perception and
behaviour; langauge and speech systems; multilingual research and
developments; prosody; syntax, morphology, lexicon; semantics;
formalisms and parsing; and tools for development and teaching.
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