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1
The SRI NIST 2010 Speaker Recognition Evaluation System (PREPRINT)
In: DTIC (2011)
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2
Human Language Technology: Opportunities and Challenges
In: DTIC (2005)
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3
Phonetic Consequences of Speech Disfluency
In: DTIC (1999)
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4
High-Accuracy Large-Vocabulary Speech Recognition Using Mixture Tying and Consistency Modeling
In: DTIC (1994)
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5
Microphone-Independent Robust Signal Processing Using Probabilistic Optimum Filtering
In: DTIC (1994)
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6
High-Performance Speech Recognition Using Consistency Modeling
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1994)
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7
High-Performance Speech Recognition Using Consistency Modeling.
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1994)
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8
Progressive-Search Algorithms for Large-Vocabulary Speech Recognition
In: DTIC (1993)
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9
A Real-Time Spoken-Language System for Interactive Problem-Solving, Combining Linguistic and Statistical Technology for Improved Spoken Language Understanding
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1993)
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10
Detection and Correction of Repairs in Human-Computer Dialog
In: DTIC (1992)
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11
Spontaneous Speech Collection for the CSR Corpus
In: DTIC (1992)
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12
Communication and Attitude Revision
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1992)
Abstract: Much recent research has been directed toward understanding those aspects of language use that fall into that somewhat ill-defined area between semantics and pragmatics. The linguistic phenomena that seem to fall into this area include presupposition, implicature, speech acts (especially performatives) , metonymy, and metaphor. These linguistic phenomena can be characterized by a failure of truth conditional semantics alone to provide a satisfactory account, which is manifested in an obvious discrepancy between the 'superficial' or 'literal' content of the sentence and the intention underlying the speaker's use of the utterance in a particular situation. Several theories have been evolving that are directed toward explaining these phenomena on the border between semantics and pragmatics, which could be characterized broadly as update theories. All of these general frameworks have a common thread: a view of an utterance as an action that transforms an initial state of the world into a resulting state, and in the process producing a set of changes to the mental states of the participants. Theses changes are represented as an update to a model of their respective mental states. The meaning of the utterances in the most general sense is identified with the changes they produce in this model, rather than with their truth-conditional semantics alone.
Keyword: *ATTITUDES(PSYCHOLOGY); *LINGUISTICS; *SEMANTICS; *SOCIAL COMMUNICATION; Linguistics; Voice Communications
URL: http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA259713
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA259713
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13
Prosody, Syntax and Parsing
In: DTIC (1990)
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14
Data Collection and Analysis in the Air Travel Planning Domain
In: DTIC (1989)
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15
Why Is Discourse Coherent
In: DTIC (1978)
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