ISCA - International Speech
Communication Association


ISCApad Archive  »  2017  »  ISCApad #226  »  ISCA News

ISCApad #226

Saturday, April 08, 2017 by Chris Wellekens

2 ISCA News
2-1Please vote for the Board renewal NOW!

Dear ISCA Member,

This is a call for you to vote in the 2017 ISCA Board Election.

We are pleased to announce 16 qualified nominations for vacant seats on the ISCA board. According to the ISCA by-laws, you are invited to vote for any number of candidates from 0 to 16 in the 2017 ISCA Board Election. Each vote has equal weight.

Please visit http://isca-speech.org/iscavote to cast your vote using your ISCA userID and password.

If your have forgotten your ID and/or password please contact our secretary Manu Foxonet at ef@isca-speech.org

After voting, you can still revise your vote at any time before 30-Apr-2 017.

Thank you for your participation!

Best regards,
ISCA Board

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2-2Election of members for the Board of ISCA

Announcement:

Election of members for the Board of ISCA (4-year term: 2017-2021)


The ISCA Board currently has 14 members from 10 countries (see the full list below). Members are elected to the Board for a period of four years and no member may serve on the Board for more than two consecutive terms.  The following Board members will have served for two terms of four years in August 2017: Keikichi HIROSE, Haizhou LI, Douglas O?SHAUGHNESSY, and thus these three will leave the Board.  In addition,  Mark HASEGAWA-JOHNSON, Gérard BAILLY, Martin COOKE, Hynek HERMANSKY, and Kate KNILL will be ending their first term; Martin COOKE and Hynek HERMANSKY are not standing for re-election, while the other three will run for re-election.  Thus we have openings for eight members for the 2017-2021 term.

In accordance with the ISCA by-laws, elections to the Board will take place in April 2017.   We invite nominations from the ISCA membership.  Each nomination requires the support of three members of the Association and agreement from the candidate (e.g., by email).  The ISCA statutes specify a maximum of three Board members from any one country.  Each ISCA member will be asked to cast a anonymous ballot in the election, via a survey website.

Members elected to the Board will be expected to be responsible for one or more of the areas listed below assigned by the Board, to commit time to furthering the work of ISCA in their area (s), to attend the Board meetings that take place at each annual INTERSPEECH conference and to participate in additional virtual meetings during the year (via teleconference).  All candidates should be aware of these obligations and commit themselves to fulfilling them before agreeing to be nominated.

The Board will accept nominations either from proposers or self-nominations, as long as indication of support (three members of ISCA) is provided. Please send your nomination(s) to the ISCA Secretariat secretariat@isca-speech.org   BEFORE March 1st, 2017  with the following information:
Full Name and Title:
Position and Institution:
Research area: 
Indication of willingness to serve if elected:
E-mail:
URL:
Short biography (one paragraph)
Short statement (one paragraph, acknowledging the willingness to serve the duty assigned by the Board, and the preference of area(s) one would intend to do.)   
Names and emails of three proposers (ISCA members).
Please provide a photo, for posting on the ballot.
Please do not hesitate to contact us if you require further information about the nomination process or about duties of ISCA Board members. 

Best regards,
Haizhou LI  (ISCA President)   isca-president@isca-speech.org
Douglas O'Shaughnessy (ISCA Secretary)    secretariat@isca-speech.org 

=====

Areas:  

FINANCE, CONFERENCES, WORKSHOPS, MEMBERSHIP SERVICES AND ISCA WEBSITE, PUBLICATIONS AND ARCHIVE, DISTINGUISHED LECTURERS AND GEOGRAPHICAL OUTREACH, SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS, TRAINING & EDUCATION, GRANTS, FELLOWS & AWARDS, INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, PUBLIC RELATIONS, SECRETARIAT

Current Board:
Haizhou LI (ISCA President)
John HANSEN (ISCA Vice President)
Mark HASEGAWA-JOHNSON (ISCATreasurer)
Douglas O'SHAUGHNESSY (ISCA Secretary)
Gérard BAILLY
Kay BERKLING
Martin COOKE
Hynek HERMANSKY
Keikichi HIROSE
Kate KNILL
Lori LAMEL
Sebastian MOELLER
Torbjorn SVENDSEN
Satoshi NAKAMURA



 
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2-3Videos of Interspeech and ISCA supported conferences
Video archives are available in 
http://www.isca-speech.org/iscaweb/index.php/archive/video-archive 
where keynote speeches from IS 2010 can be seen. You will also find video archives 
of many other conferences.
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2-4Videos of INTERSPEECH 2016

The videos for the plenary talks at IS2016 are now accessible via https://www.superlectures.com/interspeech2016/ where all the videos of previous conferences are also available.

In case of problems, they can also be watched on our the website of the conference http://www.interspeech2016.org/

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2-5ISCA Online Archive

 

ISCA Online Archive is now accessible directly from ISCA Web main page.
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2-6Obituary Professor Osamu Fujimura

 Osamu Fujimura, 藤村靖 (b.August 29, 1927 in Tôkyô, d. March 13, 2017 in Waikoloa Beach, Hawaii). The Fujimura family is from the Genzi 源氏 family, remotely related to the Samurai family, Minamoto Yoritomo源頼朝, who founded the Kamakura Bakuhu (military government site) as a Syôgun将軍 in the 12th century; his grave is behind the Hachimangu八幡宮 near Osamu and his wife Catita’s house in Yukinosita, Kamakura.

Osamu is survived by his wife J.C. Williams, and their two sons, Andrew Fujimura and Nicholas Itaru Fujimura, and by his two sons, Akira and Makoto Fujimura from his first marriage.

Osamu received his, D.Sc in Physics from the University of Tôkyô in 1962. His first position was Research Assistant at The Kobayashi Institute of Physical Research, Kokubunzi, Tôkyô from 1952 – 1958; then an Assistant Professor, Research Laboratory of Communication Science, University of Electrocommunications, Tyôhu, Tôkyô from 1958 – 1965. From 1958 - 1961 he was a DSR (Division of Sponsored Research) Research Staff Member, at the Research Laboratory of Electronics (Speech Communication Group), MIT, where he had the opportunity to be supervised by Drs. Morris Halle and K. N. Stevens. This was followed by two years (1963 – 1965)as a Guest Researcher, at the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, where he was supervised by Dr. Gunnar Fant. During this time, he conducted research that contributed to the foundation of modern acoustic analyses.

He returned to Japan as Professor and Director to head up the new Research Institute of Logopedics and Phoniatric (RILP)), Faculty of Medicine, University of Tôkyô (1965 – 1973). Concurrently, he also was Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Linguistics, Faculty of Letters, University of Tôkyô, and also Chair of the Graduate Course in Physiology (in Division of Medicine), University of Tôkyô, (1973). It was during this time that RILP became an active research center for speech science studies, focusing on developing highly advanced techniques and tools for studying articulation of speech, including fiberoptics, EMG (electromyography) and the X-Ray Microbeam. Some studies conducted at RILP during this time are considered to be foundational to modern phonetics science, and still cited in the current phonetics papers.

In 1973, Osamu became probably the first professor to ever voluntarily leave the University of Tôkyô, when he chose to move to the U.S. to become a member of the Technical Staff, and later Department Head at AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ. (Linguistics and Speech Analysis Research, 1973-1984, Linguistics and Artificial Intelligence Research, 1984-1987, and Department of Artificial Intelligence Research, 1987-1988). It was during this time that Osamu worked with a number of scientists, and is remembered for encouraging a large number of young speech scientists, including Mark Liberman, Janet Pierrehumbert, Mary Beckman, Marian Macchi, Sue Hertz, Jan Edwards, Julia Hirschberg, to name a few. We have heard from people like John McCarthy, a formal phonologist, and Barbara Partee, a formal semanticist, that Osamu took care of them well as post-doc researchers at Bell Labs, indicating that he had a broad vision about the whole field of linguistics.

When the speech department at Bell Labs closed down, Osamu moved to Columbus, Ohio in 1988, where he became Professor, Dept. Speech & Hearing Science, The Ohio State University (OSU). He continued to teach and conduct research until he retired as Professor Emeritus in 2003. It was during this time that Fujimura began to formulate the C/D model. He mentored a number of researchers during this time, including Reiner Wilhelms Tricarico, Chao-Min Wu, Donna Erickson, Kerrie Beechler Obert, Caroline Menezez, Bryan Pardo, to name a few. During this time at OSU, he was also a Member at the Center for Cognitive Science (1988 – 2003), and a Participating Professor, Biomedical Engineering Center (1992 – 2003). In addition he was a periodic Guest Researcher at ATR/HIP, Japan during the period of 1992 – 1996. From 1997 - 1998 he had Sabbatical Leave from OSU to be at JSPS (Japan Society for the Promotion of Science) Invitation Fellow at the Research Institute of Asian and African Languages and Cultures, Tôkyô University for Foreign Studies, Tôkyô, Japan. After retirement from OSU, he was a researcher at the Center of Excellence (COE), Nagoya University (Prof. K. Kakehi & F. Itakura) from 2003 – 2004, and this was followed by a position as a Fellow at the International Institute for Advanced Studies, Kyôto, Japan from April 2004 – August 2006.

Osamu’s career as a scientist spanned about three quarters of a century.He authored (co-author or editor) over 256 scientific writings covering a vast range of topics including physics, speech acoustics and articulation, phonology, kanji transcription methods, syntax, and even more. These include 11 books and monographs, 64 journal articles, 58 articles or chapters in books, 56 proceedings articles, 42 miscellaneous writings and 25 articles in RILP.  Just a glance at the early lab reports from RILP will demonstrate the breadth of research he did himself and what he supported.  

It is difficult to name the most important things Osamu did. As a researcher, he collaborated with colleagues to introduce X-ray technologies to study human articulation patterns, with the X-ray microbeam speech corpus still considered to be an important research resource for modern phonetic research. He is also known for his work that contributed to the foundation of modern acoustic analyses of speech sounds, especially the acoustics of nasal consonants, proposing the notion of “anti-formant”. In addition to his contribution to phonetic science, he wrote a review of “Syntactic Structures” by Noam Chomsky in Japanese in 1963, thereby contributing to introducing generative linguistics in Japan. He also developed a model of speech articulation, called “the C/D model”, in which phonological featural specifications are “Converted” and “Distributed” to several articulators. It is an explicit theory of how mental, phonological information is mapped onto actual physiological articulatory commands. This theory is pursued by a number of current researchers in phonetics. 

However, perhaps more than what Osamu actually did as a scientist, is how he encouraged others in his research labs and beyond, especially young researchers, both men and women, to observe data, ask questions, think about how to interpret and organize their observations, and then to cheer them on as they became independent researchers, contributing in their own right to the field of speech science.

We like to think of Osamu's commitment to especially young researchers as “pay-it-forward”. May we, as we remember Osamu, be willing to share time, energy, expertise, mentoring, etc. with the up and coming younger generation. 

Thank you, Osamu. And, thank you, for your smile.

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2-7Christian Benoit Award

Eighth Christian Benoît Award

supported by the International Speech Communication Association,

the Association Francophone de la Communication Parlée and GIPSA-lab

Deadline May 29, 2017

The Christian Benoît Award is delivered periodically by the Association Christian Benoit (**). It is

given to promising young scientists in the domain of SPEECH and FACE-TO-FACE

COMMUNICATION. It can concern basic or applied research projects.

The Award provides the elected scientist with financial support for the development of a short-term

research project that

(1) illustrates concretely the achievements of her/his research work

(2) could help promoting this work in the scientific community and to Grant Agencies

(3) gives an overall view of the state of the art in the research domain.

The proposed research project can have the form of a demonstrator, a technical product or of a

pedagogical multi-media product (Movie, Web-site, interactive software…).

The Award is valued at 7,500 Euros(*).

The commitments of the elected scientist are:

-- to attend the Interspeech2017 Conference in Stockholm, Sweden

-- to deliver the final product of the project within 2 years

-- to present her/his results in a workshop such as, among others, AVSP, ISSP, or

SpeechProsody.

In the application, the candidate should provide

--a statement of research interests (2 pages max),

--a detailed curriculum vitae including the list of a selection of the most relevant publications

for the project.

--a description of the proposed short-term research project (15 pages max) . The

description should include a presentation of the scientific and/or pedagogical objectives and

of the methodological aspects, a link with the former research work of the applicant, as well

as a detailed description of the provisional budget.

Applications will be evaluated by an international committee including experts in the field of Speech

and Face-to-Face communications and representatives of the Institutions supporting the award.

Applications should be sent to

Pascal.Perrier@gipsa-lab.fr

before Monday May 29, 2017

. Electronic submissions are mandatory.

The successful candidate will be notified by June 19, 2017. The Award will be delivered at the

Interspeech 2017 Conference in Stockholm (Sweden) (www.interspeech2017.org)

For further information, please contact Pascal Perrier.

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* 3,500 Euros will be given immediately; the remaining 4,000 Euros will be available at reception of the

multi-media project by the Christian Benoit Association. Travel and registration costs necessary to

attend the Interspeech 2017 Conference will have to be paid on this grant.

** For details about the Association Christian Benoît and the past awardees of the Christian Benoît

Award see http://www.gipsa-lab.fr/acb/

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