International audienceThis paper summarizes the collaboration of the LIA and CLIPS laboratories on speaker diarization of broadcast news during the spring NIST Rich Transcription 2003 evaluation campaign (NIST-RTÕ03S). The speaker diarization task consists of segmenting a conversation into homogeneous segments which are then grouped into speaker classes. Two approaches are described and compared for speaker diarization. The first one relies on a classical two-step speaker diarization strategy based on a detection of speaker turns followed by a clustering process, while the second one uses an integrated strategy where both segment boundaries and speaker tying of the segments are extracted simultaneously and challenged during the whole process. These two methods are used to investigate various strategies for the fusion of diarization results. Furthermore, segmentation into acoustic macro-classes is proposed and evaluated as a priori step to speaker diarization. The objective is to take advantage of the a priori acoustic information in the diariza-tion process. Along with enriching the resulting segmentation with information about speaker gender
We show that single-electron transport through a single dopant can be achieved even in a random background of many dopants without any precise placement of individual dopants. First, we observe potential maps of a phosphorus-doped channel by low-temperature Kelvin probe force microscopy, and demonstrate potential changes due to single-electron trapping in single dopants. We then show that only one or a small number of dopants dominate the initial stage of source-drain current vs gate voltage characteristics in scaled-down, doped-channel, field-effect transistors.
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