1. Dysarthric speakers' intelligibility and speech characteristics in relation to computer speech recognition
- Author
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Holly Ballard, Howard C. Shane, Tyler Carpenter, Anne Benoit, and Linda J. Ferrier
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Speech recognition ,Rehabilitation ,Spastic dysarthria ,Speech characteristics ,Audiology ,Intelligibility (communication) ,medicine.disease ,Voice analysis ,Cerebral palsy ,Speech and Hearing ,Fluency ,Dysarthria ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
This research examined the use of the DragonDictate speech recognition system as a writing aid by 10 speakers with spastic dysarthria due to cerebral palsy with the ultimate goal of establishing prescription guidelines. The objectives were to (1) determine how intelligibility relates to recognition success; (2) determine those characteristics of speech, fluency, and voice that affect the accuracy level of the voice recognizer; and (3) investigate individual profiles of recognition over a series of dictations among high- and low-intelligibility dysarthric speakers versus nondisabled controls. Correlations between intelligibility measures and recognition success measures were strong. The total number of voice features correlated moderately with the number of readings needed to reach 80% recognition levels and with variability in recognition. The frequency of pauses showed a strong positive association with the number of readings subjects needed to reach 80% recognition. The frequency of nonspeech sounds was...
- Published
- 1995
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