A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation Systems
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Citation: Andrew Robert Golding and Paul S. Rosenbloom. (1991) A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation Systems. In KSL-91-26, April,1991.
| Publication techreport ( Edit ) | |
| type | Technical Report |
| bibtype | techreport |
| Bibtex basics | |
| author | Andrew Robert Golding and Paul S. Rosenbloom |
| title | A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation Systems |
| number | KSL-91-26 |
| institution | Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory |
| year | 1991 |
| month | April |
| Bibtex more | |
| Access Paper | |
| abstract | Anapron is a name-pronunciation system based on a general method for combining rule-based and case-based reasoning. An experiment was run to see how this system compares with existing systems for name pronunciation. Seven such systems were tested: three state-of-the-art commercial systems (from Bellcore, Bell Labs, and DEC), two variants of a machine-learning system(NETtalk), and two humans. Each system was run on the same 400-name test set.The acceptability of its pronunciations was evaluated by a panel of 14 test subjects. To hide the identities of the systems, the order of systems was randomized for each test name, and all pronunciations were read by the DECtalk speech synthesizer. The main result was that Anapron was found to perform almost at the level of the commercial systems, and significantly better than the two versions of NETtalk. |
| KSL Technical Report ID: KSL-91-26 |
Facts about A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation SystemsRDF feed
| Abstract | Anapron is a name-pronunciation system bas … Anapron is a name-pronunciation system based on a general method for combining rule-based and case-based reasoning. An experiment was run to see how this system compares with existing systems for name pronunciation. Seven such systems were tested: three state-of-the-art commercial systems (from Bellcore, Bell Labs, and DEC), two variants of a machine-learning system(NETtalk), and two humans. Each system was run on the same 400-name test set.The acceptability of its pronunciations was evaluated by a panel of 14 test subjects. To hide the identities of the systems, the order of systems was randomized for each test name, and all pronunciations were read by the DECtalk speech synthesizer. The main result was that Anapron was found to perform almost at the level of the commercial systems, and significantly better than the two versions of NETtalk. y better than the two versions of NETtalk. |
| Author | Andrew Robert Golding and Paul S. Rosenbloom + |
| Bibtype | techreport + |
| Has author | Andrew Robert Golding and Paul S. Rosenbloom + |
| Has identifier | KSL-91-26 + |
| Has publishing details | April,1991 + |
| Has title | A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation Systems + |
| Has where published | KSL-91-26 + |
| Has year | 1991 + |
| Institution | Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory + |
| Ksl tr id | KSL-91-26 + |
| Month | April + |
| Number | KSL-91-26 + |
| Process note | NO + |
| Title | A Comparison of Anapron with Seven Other Name-Pronounciation Systems + |
| Year | 1991 + |
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