Lexical Access Model for Italian -- Modeling human speech processing: identification of words in running speech toward lexical access based on the detection of landmarks and other acoustic cues to features
Maria-Gabriella Di Benedetto, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel, Jeung-Yoon, Choi, Luca De Nardis, Javier Arango, Ian Chan, Alec DeCaprio

TL;DR
This paper develops an Italian speech recognition system based on hierarchical feature models inspired by human lexical access, aiming to understand language-independent mechanisms in speech processing.
Contribution
It extends Stevens' lexical access model to Italian, introduces a new corpus, and tests the universality of acoustic landmarks as cues for word recognition.
Findings
Italian speech recognizer based on hierarchical features
Introduction of the LaMIT database for Italian speech
Potential evidence for language-independent acoustic landmarks
Abstract
Modelling the process that a listener actuates in deriving the words intended by a speaker requires setting a hypothesis on how lexical items are stored in memory. This work aims at developing a system that imitates humans when identifying words in running speech and, in this way, provide a framework to better understand human speech processing. We build a speech recognizer for Italian based on the principles of Stevens' model of Lexical Access in which words are stored as hierarchical arrangements of distinctive features (Stevens, K. N. (2002). "Toward a model for lexical access based on acoustic landmarks and distinctive features," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., 111(4):1872-1891). Over the past few decades, the Speech Communication Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) developed a speech recognition system for English based on this approach. Italian will be the first language…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpeech Recognition and Synthesis · Phonetics and Phonology Research · Speech and dialogue systems
