Speech verification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Speech verification uses speech recognition to verify the correctness of the pronounced speech. Speech verification does not try to decode unknown speech from a huge search space, but instead, knowing the expected speech to be pronounced, it attempts to verify the correctness of the utterance's pronunciation, cadence, pitch, and stress. Pronunciation assessment is the main application of this technology, which is sometimes called computer-aided pronunciation teaching.

Linear predictive coding (LPC) is an example of a speech coding method used in speech recognition, speaker recognition and speech verification.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Gupta, Shipra (May 2016). "Application of MFCC in Text Independent Speaker Recognition" (PDF). International Journal of Advanced Research in Computer Science and Software Engineering. 6 (5): 805-810 (806). ISSN 2277-128X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-10-18. Retrieved 18 October 2019.

External links[]


Retrieved from ""