Subject: Reminder: Call for papers for the Interspeech Consonant Challenge From: Martin Cooke <m.cooke@xxxxxxxx> Date: Fri, 7 Mar 2008 10:52:01 +0000 List-Archive:<http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=AUDITORY>Reminder: Call for papers ========================= Consonant Challenge: Human-machine comparisons of consonant recognition in quiet and noise Interspeech, 22-26 September 2008 Brisbane, Australia * Update: All information concerning the native listener experiments and baseline recognisers including their results can now be found and downloaded from the Consonant Challenge website: http://www.odettes.dds.nl/challenge_IS08/ * Deadline for submissions: The deadline and paper submission guidelines for full paper submission (4 pages) is April 7th, 2008. Paper submission is done exclusively via the Interspeech 2008 conference website. Participants of this Challenge are asked to indicate the correct Special Session during submission. More information on the Interspeech conference can be found here: http://www.interspeech2008.org/ * Topic of the Consonant Challenge: Listeners outperform automatic speech recognition systems at every level of speech recognition, including the very basic level of consonant recognition. What is not clear is where the human advantage originates. Does the fault lie in the acoustic representations of speech or in the recogniser architecture, or in a lack of compatibility between the two? There have been relatively few studies comparing human and automatic speech recognition on the same task, and, of these, overall identification performance is the dominant metric. However, there are many insights which might be gained by carrying out a far more detailed comparison. The purpose of this Special Session is to make focused human-computer comparisons on a task involving consonant identification in noise, with all participants using the same training and test data. Training and test data and native listener and baseline recogniser results will be provided by the organisers, but participants are encouraged to also contribute listener responses. * Call for papers: Contributions are sought in (but not limited to) the following areas: - Psychological models of human consonant recognition - Comparisons of front-end ASR representations - Comparisons of back-end recognisers - Exemplar vs statistical recognition strategies - Native/Non-native listener/model comparisons * Organisers: Odette Scharenborg (Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands -- O.Scharenborg@xxxxxxxx) Martin Cooke (University of Sheffield, UK -- M.Cooke@xxxxxxxx) We hope to see you in Brisbane Odette Scharenborg and Martin Cooke