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1781
Acoustic Analysis of Female Voice during
In: http://www.ijser.org/researchpaper/Acoustic-Analysis-of-Female-Voice-during-Menstruation-cycle.pdf
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1782
Balancing up Efficiency and Accuracy in Translation Retrieval
In: http://lingo.stanford.edu/pubs/tbaldwin/jnlp-journal01.pdf
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1783
Display Unit for Bangla Characters
In: http://banglajol.info/index.php/IIUCS/article/download/2856/2370/
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1784
Russian orthography and learning to read
In: http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/rfl/April2009/articles/kerek.pdf
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1785
THE INSTITUTE OF ELECTRONICS, INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION ENGINEERS
In: http://www.gavo.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~mine/paper/PDF/2003/SP2002-179_p1-6_t2003-3.pdf
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1786
iSCAN: A Phoneme-based Predictive Communication Aid for Nonspeaking Individuals
In: http://pokristensson.com/pubs/TrinhEtAlASSETS2012.pdf
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1787
Attitude Literacy Linguistic factors? Toddlers ’ language development across some languages Swedish Danish
In: http://www.let.rug.nl/~gooskens/pdf/pres_iclave_2009.pdf
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1788
iSCAN: A Phoneme-based Predictive Communication Aid for Nonspeaking Individuals
In: http://www.keithv.com/pub/iscan/iSCAN_Final.pdf
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1789
Rule-based Korean Grapheme to Phoneme Conversion Using Sound Patterns a
In: http://www.aclweb.org/anthology-new/Y/Y09/Y09-2049.pdf
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1790
ShakerVis: Visual Analysis of Segment Variation of German Translations of Shakespeare’s Othello
In: http://cs.swansea.ac.uk/~csbob/research/textVis/geng13shakerVis.pdf
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1791
Pronouncing Anglicisms: On the difficulty experienced by English-dominant learners of German
Shantz, Kailen. - : University of Alberta
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1792
A phonologically calibrated acoustic dissimilarity measure
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1793
Using genre-specific features for patent summaries
Abstract: Patent search is recall-driven, which goes hand in hand with at least a partial sacrifice of precision. As a consequence, patent analysts have to regularly view and examine a large amount of patents. This implies a very high workload. Interactive analysis aids that help to minimize this workload are thus of high demand. Still, these aids do not reduce the amount of the material to be examined, they only facilitate its examination. Its reduction can be achieved working with patent summaries instead of full patent documents. So far, high quality patent summaries are produced mainly manually and only a few research works address the problem of automatic patent summarization. Most often, these works either replicate the summarization metrics known from general discourse summarization or focus on the claims of a patent. However, it can be observed that neither of the strategies is adequate: general discourse state-of-the-art summarization techniques are of limited use due to the idiosyncrasies of the patent genre, and techniques that focus on claims only miss in their summaries important details provided in the other sections on the components of the invention introduced in the claims. We propose a patent summarization technique that takes the idiosyncrasies of the patent genre (such as the unbalanced distribution of the content across the different sections of a patent, excessive length of the sentences in the claims, abstract vocabulary, etc.) into account to obtain a comprehensive summary of the invention. In particular, we make use of lexical chains in the claims and in the description of the invention and of aligned claim–description segments at the subsentential level to assess the relevance of the individual fragments of the document for the summary. The most relevant fragments are selected and merged using full-fledged natural language generation techniques. ; The work reported on in this paper has been carried out in the framework of the TOPAS (Tool Platform for Intelligent Patent Analysis and Summarization) project, which has been partially funded by the European Commission within its FP7 Programme under the contract number FP7-SME-286639. The TOPAS Consortium was composed of Brügmann Software, Papenburg; IALE, Barcelona; IntelliSemantic s.a., Torino; Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona; and the University of Stuttgart. Horacio Saggion acknowledges the support by the European Commission under the contract number FP7-ICT-611383.
Keyword: Lexical chains; Patents; Segment-based summarization; Segmentation; Sentence aggregation; Summarization
URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ipm.2016.07.002
http://hdl.handle.net/10230/47815
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1794
Hand gestures facilitate the acquisition of novel phonemic contrasts when they appropriately mimic target phonetic features
Xi, Xiaotong; Li, Peng; Baills, Florence. - : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
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1795
Variability in L2 phonemic learning originates from speech-specific capabilities: an MMN study on late bilinguals
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1796
Singing voice phoneme segmentation by hierarchically inferring syllable and phoneme onset positions
Gong, Rong; Serra, Xavier. - : International Speech Communication Association (ISCA)
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1797
Epenthetic plosives in English: phonetic and phonological aspects
Akamatsu, Tsutomu. - : Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Servizo de Publicacións e Intercambio Científico
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1798
Mantenimiento y elisión de la /d/ intervocálica en el español de Valencia
Gómez Molina, José Ramón; Gómez Devís, Mª Begoña. - : Universidade de Santiago de Compostela. Servizo de Publicacións e Intercambio Científico
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