LINGUIST List 19.2611
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Mon Aug 25 2008
Calls: Lang Acq,Psycholing/USA; Phonology,Phonetics/India
Editor for this issue: F. Okki Kurniawan
<okki linguistlist.org>
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Directory
1. Bill
VanPatten,
L2 Processing and Parsing: State of the Science
2. Kalika
Bali,
Consonant Challenge for Indian Languages
Message 1: L2 Processing and Parsing: State of the Science
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Date: 23-Aug-2008
From: Bill VanPatten <bill.vanpatten ttu.edu>
Subject: L2 Processing and Parsing: State of the Science
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Full Title: L2 Processing and Parsing: State of the Science Short Title: L2 Processing and Parsing Date: 21-May-2009 - 24-May-2009 Location: Lubbock, TX, USA Contact Person: Bill VanPatten Meeting Email: L2processing ttu.edu Web Site: http://www.languages.ttu.edu/L2processing Linguistic Field(s): Language Acquisition; Psycholinguistics Call Deadline: 01-Nov-2008 Meeting Description: Texas Tech University is pleased to host a special conference on 'Second Language Processing and Parsing: State of the Science'. Second Call for Papers
The deadine is approaching for abstract submission to the special May 2009 conference on ''L2 Processing and Parsing: State of the Science.'' Please visit our website http://www.languages.ttu.edu/L2processing for details. Abstract submission deadline is November 1, 2008.
Invited Plenary Speakers: David Birdsong Harald Clahsen Alan Juffs Michael Sharwood Smith Bill VanPatten Invited Colloquia Organizers: Paola E. Dussias, Issues in Syntactic Processing Gretchen Sunderman, Issues in Lexical Processing Andrew P. Farley, Issues in Instruction and Processing
Message 2: Consonant Challenge for Indian Languages
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Date: 19-Aug-2008
From: Kalika Bali <kalikab microsoft.com>
Subject: Consonant Challenge for Indian Languages
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Full Title: Consonant Challenge for Indian Languages Short Title: CCIL Date: 15-Dec-2008 - 18-Dec-2008 Location: Goa, India Contact Person: Kalika Bali Meeting Email: kalikab microsoft.com Web Site: http://ragashri.ee.iisc.ernet.in/ILCC Linguistic Field(s): Phonetics; Phonology Call Deadline: 29-Sep-2008 Meeting Description: Consonant Challenge for Indian Languages Detection and Recognition of Consonants in Indian Language Speech Data (Special Session of SLT08 http://www.slt2008.org/default.asp) Call for Papers In order to promote speech technology research in Indian Languages and to better understand any specific issues related to speech recognition of these languages and the possible means to address them, we are pleased to announce a Consonant Challenge in Indian Languages. The task involves detection of consonants (in CV, VC, CVC and VCV positions) in a surprise language. Training data is provided in 6 Indian languages, namely, Assamese, Bengali, Hindi, Marathi, Tamil and Telugu to all registered participants. Based on the recognition results received by the organizers and evaluated by the program committee, the highest two accuracy results will be awarded a cash prize of USD 500 and USD 250 respectively. The results will be presented in a special session at SLT 08 in Goa, India. Background: Consonant detection in speech by a machine based on purely spectral features is always problematic due to a number of reasons like the unvoiced (no-energy) portions of stop consonants that can be confused with real silence, the high energy fricative noise that maybe confused with environmental or additive noise, and the vowel like spectrum of the liquids, the nasals and the semi-vowels that make them hard to distinguish from vowels. This problem is further compounded in Indian languages where the number of consonants can go from around 23 (in Tamil) to almost 40 (in Hindi-Urdu). For example, acoustic phonetic features like voice and aspiration form a four way contrast in many Indian language stop and affricate consonants. Further, stop consonants occur for at least four, that is, labial, dental, retroflex, and velar, place of articulation (this can go to 5 or 6 for some languages like Malayalam and Hindi-Urdu). Though all Indian Languages come from four major language families (Indo-Aryan, Dravidian, Austronesian and Tibeto-Burman, with the majority from the former two), the languages have co-existed for a long time to have borrowed and shared features even at the phonetic level. For example, the borrowing of retroflex sounds from Dravidian to Indo-European and of aspiration as a feature of stops the other way around. From a Speech Recognition perspective, a deeper understanding of how consonants are detected and recognized can not only help us better understand how to model these sounds (ref. difference between human and computer consonant recognition) but also, in the specific case of Indian languages, open up research issues into model adaptation from one language to another (related)language. This might allow researchers to explore ways and means to scale from one language to another where resources in terms of training data are limited Important Dates: Training Data release to registered participants: 29th August 2008 Test Data in surprise language made available: 8th September 2008 Recognition results and paper submission: 29th September 2008 Results Announced: 20th October 2008 Camera-ready paper submission: 3rd November 2008 Organizing Committee: Prof. AG Ramakrishanan, Dept of Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore Kalika Bali, Microsoft Research India Program Committee: Prof. Hema Murthy, IIT Madras, Chennai Prof. Preeti Rao, IIT Bombay, Mumbai Dr. Mallikarjun, CIIL, Mysore Prof. Roni Rosenfeld, CMU, Pittsburgh Dr. Shyamal Das Mandal, CDAC Kolkata Dr. Amitav Das, Microsoft Research Dr. Ashish Verma, IBM IRL, New Delhi Contact: Please mail the organising chairs to register for the challenge at: ramkiag ee.iisc.ernet.in kalikab microsoft.com URL: http://ragashri.ee.iisc.ernet.in/ILCC
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