Speaker-dependent recognition of continuous speech is generally held to be an easier task than speaker-independent continuous speech recognition. In this paper we describe experiments which attempt to quantify this assertion for a particular feature-based recogniser. The primary basis for the study is an investigation of how well a feature-based recogniser developed to work near-perfectly on one particular speaker works on continuous speech examples from a large number of other speakers.
Cite as: O'Kane, M., Kenne, P., Landy, D., Atkins, S. (1991) Generalising from single-speaker recognition in a feature-based recogniser. Proc. 2nd European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 1991), 409-412, doi: 10.21437/Eurospeech.1991-104
@inproceedings{okane91_eurospeech, author={M. O'Kane and P. Kenne and D. Landy and S. Atkins}, title={{Generalising from single-speaker recognition in a feature-based recogniser}}, year=1991, booktitle={Proc. 2nd European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 1991)}, pages={409--412}, doi={10.21437/Eurospeech.1991-104} }