Data Mining for Detecting Errors in Dictation Speech Recognition
Zhou, L.; Shi, Y.; Feng, J.; Sears, A.
Speech and Audio Processing, IEEE Transactions on
Volume 13, Issue 5, Sept. 2005 Page(s): 681 - 688
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/TSA.2005.851874
Summary: The efficiency promised by a dictation speech recognition (DSR) system is lessened by the need for correcting recognition errors. Error detection is the precursor of error correction. Developing effective techniques for error detection can thus lead to improved error correction. Current research on error detection has focused mainly on transcription and/or domain-specific speech. Error detection in DSR has been studied less. We propose data mining models for detecting errors in DSR. Instead of relying on internal parameters from DSR systems, we propose a loosely coupled approach to error detection based on features extracted from the DSR output. The features mainly came from two sources: confidence scores and linguistics parsing. Link grammar was innovatively applied to error detection. Three data mining techniques, including NaÏve Bayes, neural networks, and Support Vector Machines (SVMs), were evaluated on 5M DSR corpora. The experimental results showed that significant performance was achieved in that F-measures for error detection ranged from 55.3% to 62.5%. This study provided insights into the merit of different data-mining techniques and different types of features in error detection.
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