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A technique for constructing Markov models for the acoustic representation of words is described. Word models are constructed from models of subword units called fenones. Fenones represent very short speech events and are obtained automatically through the use of a vector quantizer. The fenonic baseform for a word-i.e., the sequence of fenones used to represent the word-is derived automatically from one or more utterances of that word. Since the word models are all composed from a small inventory of subword models, training for large-vocabulary speech recognition systems can be accomplished with a small training script. A method for combining phonetic and fenonic models is presented. Results of experiments with speaker-dependent and speaker-independent models on several isolated-word recognition tasks are reported. The results are compared with those for phonetics-based Markov models and template-based dynamic programming (DP) matching.>
Bahl et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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