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August 27-31, 2007
Antwerp, Belgium |
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Processing Morphologically-Rich LanguagesTutorial at INTERSPEECH 2007, Antwerp, Belgium Morphologically-rich languages like Arabic, Turkish, Finnish, Korean, etc., present significant challenges for speech processing, natural language processing and machine translation. These languages are characterized by highly productive morphological processes (inflection, agglutination, compounding) that may produce a very large number of word forms for a given root form. Modelling each form as a separate word leads to a number of problems for speech and language processing applications, including:
Large-scale speech and language processing systems require more advanced modelling techniques to address these problems:
Presenters Katrin Kirchhoff Ruhi Sarikaya Short Bios Dr. Kirchhoff is a Research Assistant Professor in the EE Department at the University of Washington. Her research interests are in automatic speech recognition and natural language processing, with an emphasis on multilingual applications. She has published over 50 refereed conference papers, journal papers, and book chapters in these areas and is co-editor of a recent book on “Multilingual Speech Processing”. In 2002 she led a team effort on developing Novel Models for Arabic Speech Processing at the Johns-Hopkins Summer Research Workshop. Dr. Kirchhoff has served on numerous conference and workshop committees and is a member of the Editorial Board of the Speech Communication journal. Dr. Ruhi Sarikaya is a research staff member in the Human Language Technologies Group at IBM T.J. Watson Research Center. He received the B.S. degree from Bilkent University, Turkey in 1995, M.S. degree from Clemson University, SC in 1997 and the Ph.D. degree from Duke University, Durham, NC in 2001 all in electrical and computer engineering. He has published over 40 technical papers in refereed journal and conference proceedings and holder of four patents in the area of speech and natural language processing. At IBM he has received several prestigious awards for his work including an Outstanding Technical Achievement Award and a Research Division Award. Prior to joining IBM in 2001 he was a researcher at the Center for Spoken Language Research (CSLR) at the University of Colorado at Boulder for two years. He also spent the summer of 1999 at the Panasonic Speech Technology Laboratory, Santa Barbara, CA. He has served in the organizing committee of ASRU’05. His past and present research interests span speech recognition, natural language processing, machine learning, speech enhancement, speech-to-speech translation, speaker identification/verification and digital signal processing. Dr. Sarikaya is a member of IEEE, ACL and ISCA.
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