Authors
Amanda J Stent, Marie K Huffman, Susan E Brennan
Publication date
2008/3/1
Journal
Speech Communication
Volume
50
Issue
3
Pages
163-178
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
In this paper we examine the two-way relationship between hyperarticulation and evidence of misrecognition of computer-directed speech. We report the results of an experiment in which speakers spoke to a simulated speech recognizer and received text feedback about what had been “recognized”. At pre-determined points in the dialog, recognition errors were staged, and speakers made repairs. Each repair utterance was paired with the utterance preceding the staged recognition error and coded for adaptations associated with hyperarticulate speech: speaking rate and phonetically clear speech. Our results demonstrate that hyperarticulation is a targeted and flexible adaptation rather than a generalized and stable mode of speaking. Hyperarticulation increases after evidence of misrecognition and then decays gradually over several turns in the absence of further misrecognitions. When repairing misrecognized …
Total citations
20092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242453696786136114