Rs. Mcgowan et A. Faber, INTRODUCTION TO PAPERS ON SPEECH RECOGNITION FROM AN ARTICULATORY POINT-OF-VIEW, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 99(3), 1996, pp. 1680-1682
The following group of papers resulted from a special session entitled
Speech Recognition and Perception from an Articulatory Point of View
that was held during the spring 1994 meeting of the Acoustical Society
of America in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Organization of the session b
egan when Richard McGowan, Terry Nearey, and Juergen Schroeter invited
speakers to give papers and critiques on the role of articulation in
human perception and machine recognition. Presentations were invited f
rom three speakers or groups of speakers who were representative of th
e three speech areas in the Society: production, perception, and proce
ssing. One talk was given by Bjorn Lindblom, another was given by John
Ohala, and the third by Rick Rose, Juergen Schroeter, Mohan Sondhi, a
nd Oded Ghitza. The invited critiquers for the Lindblom paper were Ken
Stevens, Robert Remez, and Bishnu Atal; for the Rose et al. paper, Ro
ger Moore, Joe Perkell, and Terry Nearey; and for the Ohala paper, Mar
y Beckman, Douglas O'Shaughnessy, and Carol Fowler. These people creat
ed a very interesting and provocative session. Robert Fox, associate e
ditor of the speech perception section of the Journal, initiated publi
cation of and edited the papers that appear here. Written versions of
the invited papers are included here, as well as the critiques by Stev
ens, Remez, Nearey, Moore, and O'Shaughnessy. Because it was felt that
Carol Fowler's view of the importance of articulation in speech perce
ption was not sufficiently aired in a short critique, she was asked to
present her views in a longer paper. (C) 1996 Acoustical Society of A
merica.