2012
DOI: 10.1109/msp.2012.2208663
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Exemplar-Based Processing for Speech Recognition: An Overview

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Cited by 39 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…Sparse codes are also known to be analogous to the coding mechanism in neural sensory system (see [97] and references therein). Interestingly, mathematical analogy between sparse representation of data and dimension reduction using matrix factorization (used in the bag-of-units representation by [93]) has also been observed in the context of speech recognition (the reader is referred to [102] for an overview). Starting from perceptual features, retrieval techniques using these representations can therefore be used to further render higher level sensory processes in the auditory system.…”
Section: A Semantic Audio Retrievalmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Sparse codes are also known to be analogous to the coding mechanism in neural sensory system (see [97] and references therein). Interestingly, mathematical analogy between sparse representation of data and dimension reduction using matrix factorization (used in the bag-of-units representation by [93]) has also been observed in the context of speech recognition (the reader is referred to [102] for an overview). Starting from perceptual features, retrieval techniques using these representations can therefore be used to further render higher level sensory processes in the auditory system.…”
Section: A Semantic Audio Retrievalmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…It can also be viewed as an instance of exemplar-based technique [17] at the speaker level. Most of the previous attempts used some form of approaximation of SI and SD models to select the neighbours based on the acoustic match.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The trade-off is that such a system will have a huge space and time complexity. However, with the ever increasing amount of training data, as well as the growing computational and memory resources, the potential of exemplar-based approaches is currently being explored extensively (Sainath et al, 2012(Sainath et al, , 2011Gemmeke et al, 2011;De Wachter et al, 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%