Speech in Noisy Environments (SPINE) Training Transcripts
Item Name: | Speech in Noisy Environments (SPINE) Training Transcripts |
Author(s): | Astrid Schmidt-Nielsen, Elaine Marsh, Christopher Cieri, Stephanie Strassel, Kara Rennert |
LDC Catalog No.: | LDC2000T49 |
ISBN: | 1-58563-174-4 |
ISLRN: | 176-611-193-688-0 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.35111/zh7f-8r93 |
Member Year(s): | 2000 |
DCMI Type(s): | Text |
Data Source(s): | microphone speech, microphone conversation |
Project(s): | SPINE |
Application(s): | speech recognition |
Language(s): | English |
Language ID(s): | eng |
License(s): |
LDC User Agreement for Non-Members |
Online Documentation: | LDC2000T49 Documents |
Licensing Instructions: | Subscription & Standard Members, and Non-Members |
Citation: | Schmidt-Nielsen, Astrid, et al. Speech in Noisy Environments (SPINE) Training Transcripts LDC2000T49. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 2000. |
Related Works: | View |
Introduction
Speech in Noisy Environments (SPINE) Training Transcripts was developed for the Department of Defense (DoD) Digital Voice Processing Consortium (DDVPC) by Arcon Corp. The corresponding audio data, Speech in Noisy Environments (SPINE) Training Audio, is available as LDC2000S87. These corpora supported the 2000 Speech in Noisy Environments evaluation. For an example transcript, please click here.
The 2000 Speech in Noisy Environments Evaluation (SPINE1) was a first attempt to assess the state of the art and practice in speech recognition technology in noisy military environments and to exchange information on innovative speech recognition technology in the context of fully implemented systems that perform realistic tasks. It was intended to be of interest to all university, industrial and commercial speech system developers working on the problem of robust speech recognition. The evaluation gave participants the opportunity to participate in a flexible evaluation, suited to development needs and abilities.
The SPINE1 evaluation focused on the task of transcribing speech produced in noisy environments with the emphasis on speech produced in noisy military environments. The evaluation was designed to promote research progress in this area, to provide the opportunity for participants to try out new ideas for developing robust speech recognition systems that were of both scientific and practical interest, and to measure the performance of this technology.
This work was sponsored in part by National Science Foundation Grant No. IIS-9982201.
Data
The evaluation task was to transcribe speech produced in noisy environments. The training and test speech data used for this evaluation were generated by ARCON Corp. for the DoD Digital Voice Processing Consortium (DDVPC) under controlled conditions.
The speech data consists of conversations between two communicators working on a collaborative, battleship-like task in which they seek and shoot at targets (ARCON Communicability Exercise, ACE). Participants could talk freely, but the total vocabulary used was fairly limited. Each person was seated in a sound chamber in which a previously recorded military background noise environment was accurately reproduced. The participants used handsets and transmission channels that were resident to the particular environment.
The training data includes 10 of 20 available talker pairs with 14 five-minute conversations per talker pair (about 720 minutes total) available, which includes four noise scenarios.
Updates
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