ISCApad #184 |
Friday, October 11, 2013 by Chris Wellekens |
6-1 | (2013-05-01) Two positions at CSTR at the University of Edinburgh Scotland UK1. Marie Curie Research Fellow in Speech Synthesis and Speech Perception 'Using statistical parametric speech synthesis to investigate speech perception' The Centre for Speech Technology Research (CSTR) University of Edinburgh This is a rare opportunity to hold a prestigious individual fellowship in a world-leading research group at a top-ranked University, mentored by leading researchers in the field of speech technology. Marie Curie Experienced Research Fellowships are aimed at the most talented newly-qualified postdoctoral researchers, who have the potential to become leaders in their fields. This competitively salaried fellowship offers an outstanding young scientist the opportunity to kick-start his or her independent research career in speech technology, speech science or laboratory phonetics. This fellowship is part of the INSPIRE Network (http://www.inspire-itn.eu) and the project that the CSTR Fellow will spearhead involves developing statistical parametric speech synthesis into a toolbox that can be used to investigate issues in speech perception and understanding. There are excellent opportunities for collaborative working and joint publication with other members of the network, and generous funding for travel to visit partner sites, and to attend conferences and workshops. The successful candidate should have a PhD (or be near completion) in computer science, engineering, linguistics, mathematics, or a related discipline. He or she should have strong programming skills and experience with statistical parametric speech synthesis, as well as an appropriate level of ability and experience in machine learning. The fellowship is fixed term for 12 month (to start as soon as possible). CSTR is a successful and well-funded group, and so there are excellent prospects for further employment after the completion of the fellowship. The Marie Curie programme places no restrictions on nationality: applicants can be of any nationality and currently resident in any country worldwide, provided they meet the eligibility requirements set out in the full job description (available online - URL below). Salary: GBP 42,054 to GBP 46,731 plus mobility allowance Informal enquiries about this position should be made to Prof Simon King (Simon.King@ed.ac.uk) or Dr Cassie Mayo (catherin@inf.ed.ac.uk). Apply online: https://www.vacancies.ed.ac.uk/pls/corehrrecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.jobspec?p_id=013062 Closing date: 10 Jun 2013 2. An Open Position for Postdoctoral Research Associate in Speech Synthesis The Centre for Speech Technology Research (CSTR) University of Edinburgh This post holder will contribute to our ongoing research in statistical parametric ('HMM-based') speech synthesis, working closely with Principal Investigators Dr. Junichi Yamagishi and Prof. Simon King, in addition to other CSTR researchers. The focus of this position will be to conduct research into methods for generating highly intelligible synthetic speech, for a variety of applications, in the context of three ongoing and intersecting projects in CSTR: The 'SALB' project concerns the generation of extremely fast, but highly intelligible, synthetic speech for blind children. This is a joint project with the Telecommunications Research Centre Vienna (FTW) in Austria, and is funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science and Research. The 'Voice Bank' project concerns the building of synthetic speech using a very large set of recordings of amateur speakers (‘voice donors’) in order to produce personalised voices for people whose speech is disordered, due to Motor Neurone Disease. This is a joint project with the Euan MacDonald Centre for MND research, and is funded by the Medical Research Council. The main tasks will be to conduct research into automatic intelligibility assessment of disordered speech and to devise automatic methods for data selection from the large voice bank. The 'Simple4All' project is a large multi-site EU FP7 project led by CSTR which is developing methods for unsupervised and semi-supervised learning for speech synthesis, in order to create complete text-to-speech systems for any language or domain without relying on expensive linguistic resources, such as labelled data. The main tasks here will be to further the overall goals of the project, including contributing original research ideas. There is considerable flexibility in the research directions available within the Simple4All project and the potential for the post holder to form a network of international collaborators. The successful candidate should have a PhD (or be near completion) in computer science, engineering, linguistics, mathematics, or a related discipline. He or she should have strong programming skills and experience with statistical parametric speech synthesis. Whilst the advertised position is for 24 months (due to the particular projects that the post-holder will contribute to), CSTR is a stable, well-funded and successful group with a tradition of maintaining long-term support for ongoing lines of research and of building the careers of its research fellows. We expect to obtain further grant-funded research projects in the future. Informal enquiries about this position to either Dr. Junichi Yamagishi (jyamagis@inf.ed.ac.uk) or Prof. Simon King (Simon.King@ed.ac.uk). Apply Online: https://www.vacancies.ed.ac.uk/pls/corehrrecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.jobspec?p_id=013063 Closing date: 10 Jun 2013
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6-2 | (2013-05-01) Ph D or post doc at University of Karlsruhe Germany
A job opening is to be filled as soon as possible as part of the 'Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)' sponsored project at the Department of Computer Science for the duration of up to 18 months at 50% of employment at the Cooperative State University in Karlsruhe, Germany, for a Ph.D. Research Assistant
or Post-Doctoral Researcher in the field of Automatic Language Processing for Education arch A This job opening is in the field of automatic speech recognition as part of a joint research project between Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), the Cooperative State University (DHBW) and the University of Education (PH) sponsored by DFG involving speech technology for educational system. (Working language: English or German) Description Starting as soon as possible, we are seeking an experienced and motivated person to join our team of researchers from the above mentioned institutes. The ideal candidate will have knowledge in computational linguistics and algorithm design. Responsibilities include the use and improvement of research tools to update and optimize algorithms applied to diagnostics in children’s (German) writing using speech recognition and speech synthesis tools. For further details of this work, please refer to publications at SLaTE 2011, Interspeech 2011, and WOCCI 2012 by authors Berkling, Stüker, and Fay. Joint and collaborative research between the partners will be very close, offering exposure to each research lab. Candidates : - Doctoral Research Candidates may apply and are welcome for joint research with their host institution. - Experienced (post-doctoral) Research Candidates are already in possession of a doctoral degree or have at least 3 years but less than 5 years of research experience in engineering and/or hearing research. Requirements - Higher degree in speech science, linguistics, machine learning, or related field - Experience developing ASR applications - training, tuning, and optimization - Software development experience (for example: Perl, TCL, Ruby, Java, C) - Excellent communication skills in English - Willingness and ability to spend 18 months in Germany, working in a team with project partners - Knowledge of German linguistics, phonics, graphemes, morphology or willingness to learn - Strong interest in computational linguistics, morphology, phonics for German Desirable : - Interest in Education and language learning - Interest in Human Computer Interaction and game mechanics - Ability to create Graphic interfaces in multi-player applications - Working with Ruby on Rails The job will allow for interesting work within a modern and well equipped environment in the heart of Karlsruhe. The salary level, depending on your circumstances, will be in line with the 13 TV-L tarrifs. KIT and the Cooperative State University are pursuing a gender equality policy. Women are therefore particularly encouraged to apply. If equally qualified, handicapped applicants will be preferred (please submit your paperwork accordingly). Non-EU candidates need to check their ability to reside in Germany. Interested candidates, please send application (CV, certified copies of all relevant diplomas and transcripts, two letters of recommendation, proof of proficiency in English, letter of motivation (research interest, reason for applying to position) with notification of the job-number to be received on or before April 26, 2013. Send electronic application to: berkling@dhbw-karlsruhe.de. Questions about details of the job can be directed to berkling@dhbw-karlsruhe.de.
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6-3 | (2013-05-01) Thèse à Paris TechAttention : le dossier de candidature complet devra être soumis sur le site de l’EDITE au plus tard le 22 mai Sujet de thèse : Traitement du contenu verbal et analyse des sentiments dans les systèmes d’interactions humain-agent Proposé par : Chloé Clavel Directeur de thèse: Catherine Pelachaud Encadrant : Chloé Clavel Unité de recherche: UMR 5141 Laboratoire Traitement et Communication de l'Information Domaine: Département Traitement du Signal et des Images Secteur: Traitement Automatique du Langage Naturel, Dialogue Homme-Machine Thématique P: Signal Image SHS Financement : bourse EDITE (voir modalités http://edite-de-paris.fr/spip/spip.php?article172) Personnes à contacter : chloe.clavel@telecom-paristech.fr catherine.pelachaud@telecom-paristech.fr **Projet Le domaine du sentiment analysis et de l’opinion mining est un domaine en plein essor avec l’arrivée en masse de données textuelles sur le web comportant des expressions d’opinions par les citoyens (critiques de films, débats sur les commentaires de forums, tweets) (El-Bèze et al. 2010)). Les recherches en traitement automatique des langues se mobilisent sur le développement de méthodes de détection d’opinion dans les textes en s’appuyant sur ces nouvelles ressources. La diversité des données et des applications industrielles faisant appel à ces méthodes multiplient les défis scientifiques à relever avec, notamment, la prise en compte des différents contextes d’énonciation (e.g., contexte social et politique, personnalité du locuteur) et la définition du phénomène d’opinion à analyser en fonction du contexte applicatif. Ces méthodes d’analyse des sentiments dans les textes s’étendent également depuis peu à l’oral en passant par l’analyse des transcriptions automatiques issues de systèmes de reconnaissance automatique de la parole pour des problématiques d’indexation d’émissions radiophoniques ou de centres d’appels (Clavel et al., 2013), et peuvent être ainsi corrélées aux méthodes d’analyse acoustique/prosodique des émotions (Clavel et al., 2010). Autre domaine scientifique en plein essor, celui des agents conversationnels animés (ACA) fait intervenir des personnages virtuels intéragissant avec l’humain. Les ACA peuvent prendre un rôle d’assistant comme les agents conversationnels présents sur les sites de vente (Suignard, 2010), de tuteur dans le cadre des Serious Games (Chollet et al. 2012) ou encore de partenaire dans le cadre des jeux vidéos. Le défi scientifique majeur pour ce domaine est l’intégration, au sein de l’ACA, de la composante affective de l’interaction. Il s’agit d’une part de prendre en compte les comportements affectifs et des attitudes sociales de l’humain et d’autre part de les générer de façon pertinente. Nous proposons pour cette thèse de travailler sur la détection des opinions et des sentiments dans un contexte d’interaction multimodale de l’humain avec un agent conversationnel animé, sujet jusqu'à maintenant peu étudié par la “communauté agent”. En effet, d’un côté, les ACA réagissent à des contenus émotionnels essentiellement non verbaux (Schröder et al., 2011) et de l’autre côté, les ACA “assistant” réagissent à partir des contenus verbaux informatif (Suignard, 2010) sans prendre en compte les opinions ou les sentiments exprimés par l’utilisateur. Des premières études ont été réalisées sur la reconnaissance de l’affect dans le langage dans un contexte d’interaction avec un agent (Osherenko et al., 2009) mais celles-ci restent envisagées indépendamment de la stratégie de dialogue. Les développements de la thèse s’intègreront dans la plateforme GRETA qui repose sur l’architecture SAIBA, une architecture globale unifiée développée par la “communauté agent” pour la génération de comportements multimodaux (Niewiadomski et al., 2011). Greta permet de communiquer avec l’humain en générant chez l’agent une large palette de comportements expressifs verbaux et non verbaux (Bevacqua et al., 2012). Elle peut simultanément montrer des expressions faciales, des gestes, des regards et des mouvements de têtes. Cette plateforme a notamment été intégrée dans le cadre du projet SEMAINE avec le développement d’une architecture temps-réel d’interaction humain-agent (Schröder et al., 2011) qui inclut des analyses acoustiques et vidéos, un système de gestion du dialogue et, du côté de la synthèse, le système Text To Speech OpenMary et l’agent virtuel de la plateforme GRETA. A l’instar de ce projet, la détection d’opinions et de sentiments envisagée dans la thèse interviendra en entrée des modèles d’interactions multi-modaux de la plateforme. La stratégie de dialogue multimodale associée à ces entrées relatives au contenu verbal devra être définie et intégrée dans la plateforme GRETA. **Enjeux La thèse portera sur le développement conjoint de méthodes de détection des opinions et des sentiments et de stratégies de dialogue humain-agent. Les méthodes envisagées sont des méthodes hybrides mêlant apprentissage statistique et règles expertes. Pour les stratégies de dialogue, le doctorant pourra s’appuyer sur les travaux réalisés dans le cadre du moteur de dialogue DISCO (Rich et al., 2012) et du moteur développé dans le projet Semaine(Schröder et al., 2011). Les méthodes développées pourront également s’appuyer sur des analyses de corpus humain-humain ou de type Magicien d’Oz (McKeown et al., 2012) et un protocole d’évaluation de ces méthodes devra être mis en place. En particulier, pour répondre à cet objectif, la thèse devra aborder les problématiques suivantes: - la définition des types d’opinions et de sentiments pertinents à considérer en entrée du moteur de dialogue. Il s’agira d’aller au-delà delà de la distinction classique entre opinions positives et opinions négatives, peu pertinente dans ce contexte, en s’appuyant sur les modèles issus de la psycholinguistique (Martin and White, 2007); - l’identification des marqueurs lexicaux, syntaxiques, sémantiques et dialogiques des opinions et des sentiments; - la prise en compte du contexte d’énonciation: les règles implémentées pourront intégrer différentes fenêtres d’analyse : la phrase, le tour de parole et les tours de paroles antérieurs; - la prise en compte des problématiques temps-réel de l’interaction : des stratégies de dialogues seront définies en fonction des différentes fenêtres d’analyse afin de proposer des stratégies d’interactions à différents niveaux de réactivité. Par exemple, certains mots-clés pourront être utilisés comme déclencheurs de backchannel en temps réels et la planification des comportements de l’agent pourra être ajustée au fur et à mesure de l’avancement de l’interaction. **Ouverture à l’international: Ces travaux de thèse interviennent en complémentarité des travaux réalisés sur les interactions non verbales dans le cadre du projet européen FP7 TARDIS prenant comme application les Serious games dans le cas d’un entrainement à l’entretien d’embauche (http://tardis.lip6.fr/presentation) et des travaux réalisés sur le traitement des signaux sociaux dans le cadre du réseau d’excellence SSPNET (http://sspnet.eu/) Une collaboration avec Candy Sidner, professeur au département Computer Science du Worcester Polytechnic Institute et experte en modèles computationnels d’intéractions verbales et non verbales et à l’origine du moteur de dialogue DISCO (Richet et al. 2012) sera également mise en place. **Références: E. Bevacqua, E. de Sevin, S.J. Hyniewska, C. Pelachaud (2012), A listener model: Introducing personality traits, Journal on Multimodal User Interfaces, special issue Interacting ECAs, Elisabeth André, Marc Cavazza and Catherine Pelachaud (Guest Editors), 6:27–38, 2012. M. Chollet, M. Ochs and C. Pelachaud (2012), Interpersonal stance recognition using non-verbal signals on several time windows, Workshop Affect, Compagnon Artificiel, Interaction, Grenoble, November 2012, pp. 19-26 C. Clavel and G. Richard (2010). Reconnaissance acoustique des émotions, Systèmes d’interactions émotionnelles, C. Pelachaud, chapitre 5, 2010 C. Clavel, G. Adda, F. Cailliau, M. Garnier-Rizet, A. Cavet, G. Chapuis, S. Courcinous, C. Danesi, A-L. Daquo, M. Deldossi, S. Guillemin-Lanne, M. Seizou, P. Suignard (2013). Spontaneous Speech and Opinion Detection: Mining Call -centre Transcripts. In Language Resources and Evaluation, avril 2013. M. El-Bèze, A. Jackiewicz, S. Hunston, Opinions, sentiments et jugements d’évaluation, Revue TAL 2010, Volume 51 Numéro 3. J.R. Martin , P.R.R. White (2007) Language of Evaluation: Appraisal in English, Palgrave Macmillan, Novembre 2007 G. McKeown, M. Valstar, R. Cowie, R., M. Pantic, M. Schroder (2012) The SEMAINE Database: Annotated Multimodal Records of Emotionally Colored Conversations between a Person and a Limited Agent, IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing, Volume: 3 , Issue: 1, Page(s): 5- 17, Jan.-March 2012 R. Niewiadomski, S. Hyniewska, C. Pelachaud (2011), Constraint-Based Model for Synthesis of Multimodal Sequential Expressions of Emotions, IEEE Transactions of Affective Computing, vol. 2, no. 3, 134-146, Juillet 2011. A. Osherenko, E. Andre, T. Vogt (2009), Affect sensing in speech: Studying fusion of linguistic and acoustic features, International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction and Workshops, 2009 C. Rich, C. L. Sidner (2012), Using Collaborative Discourse Theory to Partially Automate Dialogue Tree Authoring. IVA 2012: 327-340 M. Schröder, E. Bevacqua, R. Cowie, F. Eyben, H. Gunes, D. Heylen, M.ter Maat, G. McKeown, S. Pammi, M. Pantic, C. Pelachaud, B. Schuller, E. de Sevin, M.l Valstar, and M. Wöllmer (2011), Building Autonomous Sensitive Artificial Listeners, IEEE Transactions of Affective Computing, pp. 134-146, Octobre 2011. P. Suignard, (2010) NaviQuest : un outil pour naviguer dans une base de questions posées à un Agent Conversationnel, WACA, Octobre 2010
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6-4 | (2013-05-01) Ph D Visual articulatory biofeedback for speech therapy Grenoble France http://www.gipsa-lab.grenoble-inp.fr/transfert/propositions/1_2013-05-01_These_arc_retour_visuel_orthophonie.pdf
Offre de thèse financée. Retour articulatoire visuel pour l'aide à la rééducation des troubles de la parole. Keywords : speech technology, 3D avatar, machine learning, augmented reality, speech therapy.
-- Pierre BADIN, DR2 CNRS Dept Parole & Cognition (ex ICP), GIPSA-lab, UMR 5216, CNRS – Grenoble University Address : GIPSA-lab / DPC, ENSE3, Domaine universitaire, 11 rue des Mathématiques, BP 46 - 38402 Saint Martin d’Hères cedex, France Email: Pierre.Badin@gipsa-lab.grenoble-inp.fr, Web site: http://www.gipsa-lab.inpg.fr/~pierre.badin Fax: Int + 33 (0)476.57.47.10 - Tel: Int + 33 (0)476.57.48.26
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6-5 | (2103-05-01) Open positions for Research Engineers in Speech and Language Cambridge UK Positions description: Open positions for Research Engineers in Speech and Language Technology The Speech Technology Group at Toshiba Cambridge Research Lab (STG-CRL), in Cambridge UK, is looking for talented individuals to lead and contribute to our ongoing research in Statistical Speech and Language Processing, in specific areas such as Speech Recognition, Statistical Spoken Dialog and Speech Synthesis. The lab in Cambridge, in collaboration with other Toshiba groups and speech laboratories in China and in Japan, covers all aspects of speech technology and at many levels: from basic and fundamental research to industrial development. We support our researchers in building their career by providing them with the freedom to publish their results and by investing on innovation and creation for addressing real problems in speech and language technology. STG-CRL has also strong connections with EU Universities and especially with the Cambridge University Engineering Department. Outstanding PhD-level candidates at all levels of experience are encouraged to apply. Candidates should be highly motivated, team-oriented and should have the ability to work independently. Strong mathematical background and excellent knowledge in statistics are required. Very good programming skills are desired. Especially for the team leaders, researchers with a solid research track, senior level and international research experience will be considered. The Toshiba Cambridge Research Lab is located in the Science Park of the university city of Cambridge. To apply send your CV and a covering letter to stg-jobs@crl.toshiba.co.uk Informal enquiries about the open positions to Prof. Yannis Stylianou (yannis.stylianou@crl.toshiba.co.uk) Closing date for applications is June 30st 2013 (or until posts filled).
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6-6 | (2103-05-01) PhD student Learning Pronunciation Variants in a Foreign Language (full time) Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands PhD student Learning Pronunciation Variants in a Foreign Language (full time) Faculty of Arts, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands Vacancy number: 23.12.13 Closing date: 24 May 2013
Responsibilities As a PhD student in this project you will investigate the interplay between exemplars and abstract representations, which is expected to vary with processing speed and experimental task, and to evolve during learning. The student will investigate these issues with behavioural experiments investigating how native speakers of Dutch learn pronunciation variants of French words with schwa deletion. Learning a foreign language implies learning pronunciation variants of words in that language. This includes the words' reduced pronunciation variants, which contain fewer and weaker sounds than the words' canonical variants (e.g. 'cpute' for English 'computer'), and which are highly frequent in casual conversations. The learner has to build mental representations (exemplars and possibly also abstract lexical representations) for these variants. Importantly, late learners will build representations that differ significantly from native listeners' representations, since reduction patterns in their native language will shape their interpretation of reduction patterns in the foreign language. The goal of this Vici project is to develop the first, fully specified, theory of how late learners of a foreign language build mental representations for pronunciation variants in that language. The dissertation will consist of an introduction, at least three experimental chapters that have been submitted to high impact international journals, and a General Discussion.
What we expect from you · You have or shortly expect to obtain a Master's degree in a field related to speech processing, such as phonetics, linguistics, psychology-, or cognitive neuroscience; · you have an excellent written and spoken command of English; · you have demonstrable knowledge of data analysis; · you preferably have knowledge of the phonetics / phonology of French; · you preferably have knowledge of the phonetics / phonology of Dutch.
What we have to offer We offer you: - full time employment at the Faculty of Arts, Radboud University Nijmegen - in addition to the salary: an 8% holiday allowance and an 8.3% end-of-year bonus; - the starting salary will amount to €2,042 gross per month on a full-time basis; the salary will increase to €2,612 gross per month on a full-time basis in the fourth year (salary scale P); - you will be appointed for an initial period of 18 months, after which your performance will be evaluated; - if the evaluation is positive, the contract will be extended by 2 years (on the basis of a 38-hour working week); - you will be classified as a PhD student (promovendus) in the Dutch university job-ranking system (UFO).
Further information - On the research group Speech Comprehension: http://www.ru.nl/speechcomprehension - On the project leader: http://mirjamernestus.nl - Or contact Prof. dr. Mirjam Ernestus, leader of the Vici project, telephone: +31 24 3612970, E-mail: m.ernestus@let.ru.nl
Applications It is Radboud University Nijmegen's policy to only accept applications by e-mail. Please send your application, including your letter of motivation, curriculum and transcripts of your university grades and stating vacancy number 23.12.13, to vacatures@let.ru.nl, for the attention of Mr drs. M.J.M. van Nijnatten, before 24 May 2013.
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6-7 | (2013-05-01) PhD position with scholarship - Silent speech interface GIPSA-lab, Grenoble, France Available PhD position with scholarship - Silent speech interface GIPSA-lab, Grenoble, France Incremental speech synthesis for a real-time silent speech interface Context : The design of a silent speech interface, i.e. a device allowing speech communication without the necessity of vocalizing the sound, has recently received considerable attention from the speech research community [1]. In the envisioned system, the speaker articulates normally but does not produce any audible sound. Application areas are in the medical field, as an aid for larynx-cancer patients, and in the telecommunication sector, in the form of a “silent telephone”, which could be used for confidential communication, or in very noisy environments. In [2], we have shown that ultrasound and video imaging can be efficiently combined to capture the articulatory movements during silent speech production; the ultrasound transducer and the video camera are placed respectively beneath the chin and in front of the lips. At present, our work focused mainly on the estimation of the target spectrum from the visual articulatory data (using artificial neural network, Gaussian mixture regression and hidden Markov modeling). The other challenging issue concerns the estimation of acceptable prosodic patterns (i.e. the intonation of the synthetic voice) from silent articulatory data only. To address this ill-posed problem, one solution consists of splitting the mapping process into two consecutive steps: (1) a visual speech recognition step which estimates the most likely sequence of word given the articulatory observations, and (2) a text-to-speech (TTS) synthesis step which generates the audio signal from the decoded word sequence. In that case, the target prosodic pattern is derived from the linguistic structure of the decoded sentence. The major drawback of this mapping method is that it cannot run in real-time. In fact, if the visual speech recognition step can be done online (i.e. words are decoded a short amount of time after they have been pronounced), standard TTS systems need to know the entire sentence to estimate the target prosody. This introduces a large delay between the (silent) articulation and the generation of the synthetic audio signal. This delay prevents the communication partners from having a fluent conversation. The main goal of this PhD project is to design a real-time silent speech interface, in which the delay between the articulatory gesture and the corresponding acoustic event has to be constant and as short as possible. Goals: The goal of this PhD project is twofold: (1) Reducing the delay between the recognition and the synthesis steps, by designing a new generation of TTS system, called “ incremental TTS system ” [3]. This system should be able to synthesize the decoded words, with acceptable prosody, as soon as they are provided by the visual speech recognition system. (2) Designing experimental paradigms in order to evaluate the system in realistic communication situations (faceto- face, remote/telephone-like interaction, human-machine interaction). The goal is to study how a silent speaker benefits from the acoustic feedback provided by the incremental TTS and how he/she adapts his/her own articulation to maximize the efficiency of the communication. Supervision: Dr. Thomas Hueber, Dr. Gérard Bailly (CNRS/GIPSA-lab) Duration / Salary : 36 months (October 2013- October 2016) / ~ €1400/month minimum (net salary). Research fields : multimodal signal processing, machine learning, interactive systems, experimental design Background: Master’s or engineer’s degree in computer science, signal processing or applied mathematics. Skills : Good skills in mathematics (machine learning) and programming (Matlab, C, Max/MSP). Knowledge in speech processing or computational linguistics would be appreciated. To apply : send your CV, transcript of records of your Master grade and a cover letter to thomas.hueber@gipsa-lab.grenoble-inp.fr References : [1] B. Denby, T. Schultz, K. Honda, T. Hueber, et al., “Silent Speech Interfaces,” Speech Communication, vol. 52, no. 4, pp. 270-287, 2010. [2] T. Hueber, E. L. Benaroya, G. Chollet, et al., “Development of a Silent Speech Interface Driven by Ultrasound and Optical Images of the Tongue and Lips”, Speech Communication, vol. 52, no. 4, pp. 288-300, 2010. [3] Buschmeier H, Baumann T, Dosch B, Schlangen D, Kopp S. “Combining Incremental Language Generation and Incremental Speech Synthesis for Adaptive Information Presentation”, in proc of the 13th Sigdial meeting, pp, 295-303, 2012.
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6-8 | (2013-05-10) Postdoctoral fellow at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University of Toronto We are seeking a skilled postdoctoral fellow (PDF) whose expertise intersects automatic speech recognition (ASR) and human-robot interaction (HRI). The PDF will work with a team of internationally recognized researchers to create an automated speech-based dialogue system between computers and robotic systems, and individuals with dementia and other cognitive impairments. These systems will automatically adapt the vocabularies, language models, and acoustic models of the component ASR to data collected from individuals with Alzheimer’s disease. Moreover, this system will analyze the linguistic and acoustic features of a user’s voice to infer the user’s cognitive and linguistic abilities, and emotional state. These abilities and mental states will in turn be used to adapt a speech output system to be more tuned to the user.
Work will involve programming, data analysis, dissemination of results (e.g., papers and conferences), and partial supervision of graduate and undergraduate students. Some data collection may also be involved.
The successful applicant will have: 1) A doctoral degree in a relevant field of computer science, electrical engineering, biomedical engineering, or a relevant discipline; 2) Evidence of impact in research through a strong publication record in relevant venues; 3) Evidence of strong collaborative skills, including possibly supervision of junior researchers, students, or equivalent industrial experience; 4) Excellent interpersonal, written, and oral communication skills; 5) A strong technical background in machine learning, natural language processing, robotics, and human-computer interaction.
This work will be conducted at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, which is affiliated with the University of Toronto.
--== About the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute ==--
One of North America’s leading rehabilitation sciences centres, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute (TRI) is revolutionizing rehabilitation by helping people overcome the challenges of disabling injury, illness ,or age-related health conditions to live active, healthier, more independent lives. It integrates innovative patient care, ground-breaking research and diverse education to build healthier communities and advance the role of rehabilitation in the health system. TRI, along with Toronto Western, Toronto General, and Princess Margaret Hospitals, is a member of the University Health Network and is affiliated with the University of Toronto.
If interested, please send a brief (1-2 page) statement of purpose, an up-to-date resume, and contact information for 3 references to Alex Mihailidis (alex.milhailidis@utoronto.ca) and Frank Rudzicz (frank@cs.toronto.edu) by 31 July 2013. The position will remain open until filled.
Frank Rudzicz, PhD. Scientist, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute; Assistant professor, Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto; Founder and Chief Science Officer, Thotra Incorporated >> http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~frank (personal) >> http://spoclab.ca (lab)
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6-9 | (2013-05-15) Post-doctorat dans le cadre du projet ANR DIADEMS, LABRI, Bordeaux France ance'Offre de post-doctorat dans le cadre du projet ANR DIADEMS (Description, Indexation, Accès aux Documents Ethnomusicologiques et Sonores).
- Sujet de post-doctorat : identification / classification instrumentale
Durée : 12 mois Salaire : environ 2000 €/mois Date de début souhaitée : septembre 2013
La reconnaissance automatique d'instrument et la classification par famille d'instruments est un domaine de recherche actif du MIR (Music Information Retrieval) [Hei09] [Kit07] [Her06] [Ess06]. Les principales techniques reposent sur des méthodes statistiques utilisant des paramètres audio de type MFCC. Nous souhaitons ici tracer une voie nouvelle, permettant de faire le lien entre le traitement de la parole et le traitement de la musique, en considérant l'interprétation musicale comme une phrase, et l'instrument ou l'instrumentiste comme un locuteur.
Ce travail s'effectuera en parallèle d'une thèse en cours sur la caractérisation et l'identification de la voix chantée. Au cours de cette thèse, nous avons proposé une méthode permettant d'identifier les segments contenant de la voix chantée dans des enregistrements polyphoniques (e.g. musique 'pop'). L'objet actuel d'étude est de déterminer quels sont les paramètres du signal les plus pertinents pour caractériser différents styles de chant.
Une des pistes que nous souhaitons poursuivre sera d'identifier l'instrument en suivant le vibrato, de manière similaire à ce qui est proposé pour la voix chantée. En insistant sur la dimension temporelle plutôt que spectrale, nous pourrons aussi observer comment s'enchainent les respirations, les attaques sonores ou les changements timbraux utilisés par le musicien. Ce travail exploratoire nécessitera dans un premier temps d'effectuer des expérimentations sur des bases de données simples (telles que [Fri97] et [Got03]) afin de valider notre approche avant d'appliquer nos algorithmes aux données du projet DIADEMS.
- Références :
[Hei09] Heittola, T., Klapuri, A., Virtanen, T., 'Musical Instrument Recognition in Polyphonic Audio Using Source-Filter Model for Sound Separation,' in Proc. 10th Int. Society for Music Information Retrieval Conf. (ISMIR 2009), Kobe, Japan, 2009.
[Kit07] Tetsuro Kitahara, Masataka Goto, Kazunori Komatani, Tetsuya Ogata, and Hiroshi G. Okuno: 'Instrument Identification in Polyphonic Music: Feature Weighting to Minimize Influence of Sound Overlaps', EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, Special Issue on Music Information Retrieval based on Signal Processing, Vol.2007, No.51979, pp.1--15, 2007.
[Her06] P. Herrera-Boyer, A. Klapuri, and M. Davy. Automatic classification of pitched musical instrument sounds. Signal Processing Methods for Music Transcription, pages 163–200. Springer, 2006.
[Ess06] S. Essid, G. Richard, and David.B. Instrument recognition in polyphonic music based on automatic taxonomies. IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech & Language Processing, 14(1):68–80, 2006.
[Fri97] L. Fritts, “Musical Instrument Samples,” Univ. Iowa Electronic Music Studios, 1997–. [Online]. Available: http://theremin.music.uiowa.edu/MIS.html
[Got03] Goto M, Hashiguchi H, Nishimura T, Oka R. RWC music database: Music genre database and musical instrument sound database. ISMIR. 2003:229–230.
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Description du projet DIADEMS (Partenaires : LaBRI, IRIT, LESC, Parisson, LIMSI, MNHN, LAM-IJLRA)
Le Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative (LESC) comprenant le Centre de Recherche en Ethnomusicologie (CREM) et le centre d'Enseignement et de Recherche en Ethnologie Amérindienne (EREA) ainsi que le Laboratoire d'Eco-anthropologie du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN) sont confrontés à la nécessité d'indexer les fonds sonores qu'ils gèrent et de faire un repérage des contenus, travail long, fastidieux et coûteux.
Lors de l'Ecole d'Été interdisciplinaire Sciences et Voix 2010 organisée par le CNRS, une convergence d'intérêts s'est dégagée entre les acousticiens, les ethnomusicologues et les informaticiens : il existe aujourd'hui des outils d'analyse avancés du son développés par les spécialistes en indexation qui permettent de faciliter le repérage, l'accès et l'indexation des contenus.
Le contexte du projet est l'indexation et l'amélioration de l'accès aux fonds d'archives sonores du LESC : le fonds du CREM et celui d'ethnolinguistique de l'EREA (« chanté-parlé » Maya, ainsi que celui du MNHN (musique traditionnelle africaine). Il s'inscrit dans la continuité d'une réflexion entreprise en 2007 pour l'accès aux données sonores de la Recherche : aucune application n'existant en « open source » sur le marché, le CREM-LESC, le LAM et la Phonothèque de la MMSH d'Aix-en Provence ont étudié la conception d'un outil innovant et collaboratif qui répond à des besoins « métier » liés à la temporalité du document, tout en étant adapté à des exigences du secteur de la recherche. Avec le soutien financier du Très Grand Equipement (TGE) ADONIS du CNRS et du Ministère de la Culture, la plateforme Telemeta développée par la société PARISSON a été mise en ligne en mai 2011 : http://archives.crem-cnrs.fr . Sur cette plateforme, des outils d'analyse élémentaires de traitement de signal sont d'ores et déjà disponibles.
Cependant, il est nécessaire de disposer d'un ensemble d'outils avancés et innovants pour une aide à l'indexation automatique ou semi-automatique de ces données sonores, issues d'enregistrements parfois longs, au contenu très hétérogène et d'une qualité variée. L'objectif du projet DIADEMS est de fournir certains des outils, de les intégrer dans Telemeta, en répondant aux besoins des usagers. Il s'en suit une complémentarité des objectifs scientifiques des différents partenaires : Les fournisseurs de technologies, l'IRIT, le LIMSI, le LaBRI et le LAM auront à : - Fournir des technologies existantes telles que la détection de parole, de musique, la structuration en locuteurs. Ces outils visent à extraire des segments homogènes d'intérêt pour l'usager. Ces systèmes auront à faire face à la diversité des bases qu'il est proposé d'étudier dans ce projet ; leur hétérogénéité est liée aux conditions d'enregistrement, au genre et à la nature des documents, à leur origine géographique. Il faudra adapter ces systèmes dits « état de l'art » aux besoins des usagers. - Proposer des outils innovants d'exploration du contenu de segments homogènes. Les travaux sur l'opposition voix parlée-déclamée-chantée, le chant, les tours de chant, la recherche de similarité musicale ne sont pas matures. Un véritable travail de recherche reste à faire et avoir à sa disposition des musicologues et des ethnomusicologues est un atout positif. Les ethnomusicologues, ethnolinguistes, acousticiens spécialistes de la voix et les documentalistes spécialisés vont jouer un rôle important dans le projet en tant que futurs utilisateurs des outils d'indexation : Les documentalistes doivent s'approprier les outils et apporter leur expérience afin d'adapter ces outils à leur besoin en indexation.
Un échange important doit se réaliser entre celui qui fournit l'outil, celui qui l'intègre et celui qui l'utilise. L'effort doit être porté sur la visualisation des résultats avec pour fin une aide forte à l'indexation en la rendant de fait semi-automatique Pour l'ethnomusicologue et le musicologue, l'objectif va au-delà de l'indexation. Il s'agit au travers d'aller et retour entre lui et les concepteurs de technologies de cibler les outils pertinents d'extraction d'information.
Jean-Luc Rouas LABRI 351, cours de la Libération 33405 Talence cedex France (+33) 5 40 00 35 08
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6-10 | (2013-05-16) Ph D Avignon France Reconnaissance du locuteur en milieu bruité Nous avons atteint ces dernières années de très bonnes performances en reconnaissance du locuteur. Et ce, malgré la présence de la variabilité session. En effet, le variabilité session est prise en compte lors du scoring en utilisant une matrice de covariance modélisant cette dernière. Ce processus est effectué dans l'espace des i-vectors [1]. Le concept des i-vectors est devenu un standard en reconnaissance du locuteur. Dans la dernière évaluation internationale NIST 2012, nous avons été confrontés à une nouvelle difficulté qui est le bruit additif [2], c'est à dire le bruit ambiant. La recherche pour réduire l'impact du bruit dans les systèmes de reconnaissance du locuteur est motivée en grande partie par le besoin d'appliquer les technologies de reconnaissance du locuteur sur des appareils portables ou sur l'Internet. Alors que les technologie promet un niveau supplémentaire de sécurité biométrique pour protéger l'utilisateur, la mise en œuvre pratique de ces systèmes doit faire face à de nombreux défis. Un des plus importants défis à surmonter est le bruit environnemental. En raison de la mobilité de ces systèmes, les sources de bruit peuvent être très variables dans le temps et potentiellement inconnus. Nous proposons de travailler dans ce cadre : proposer des stratégies permettant de compenser l'effet du bruit additif, ces stratégies peuvent intervenir à différents niveaux du processus de reconnaissance: au niveau du signal, au niveau des modèles acoustiques, au niveau des i-vectors et au niveau du scoring....) .
Dans une deuxième partie du travail, nous proposons de nous mettre dans les meilleures conditions pour que le système soit le plus robuste au bruit. Par exemple, le choix de l'énoncé à prononcer par le locuteur peut avoir de l'influence sur les performances du système [3]. Faut a t-il avoir avoir le même énoncé pour tous les locuteurs, ou au contraire chaque locuteur se distingue des autres locuteur sur un ensemble bien précis d'unités acoustiques. Dans ce dernier cas, il faut trouver une stratégie, qui permet de déterminer l'ensemble des unités acoustiques qui différencient le plus possible un locuteur (des autres locuteurs). D'autres stratégies de robustesse au bruit doivent être proposées et étudiées dans le cadre de cette thèse. Une des pistes à explorer est l'utilisation de la théorie des caractéristiques manquantes (missing-feature theory), qui a été utilisée dans le domaine du traitement de la parole [4][5][6]. Les systèmes de reconnaissance du locuteur de l'état de l'art sont fondamentalement basés sur l'utilisation de l'UBM (Universal Backgroud Model), il s'agit d'un modèle trop simple pour le traitement et la modélisation de la parole. Dans le cas de la reconnaissance en milieu bruité, la tâche devient plus complexe, il est donc légitime de se reposer la question sur l'adéquation de ce modèle pour cette tâche. Nous proposons d'adapter une approche utilisant des HMM (ou autre modèle) à cette tâche tout en profitant des avancées récemment proposées ( Factor analysis, I-vectors, …). [1] Bousquet Pierre-Michel, Matrouf Driss and Bonastre Jean-François, «Intersession compensation and scoring methods in the i-vectors space for speaker recognition » Interspeech 2011, Florence. [2] Miranti Indar Mandasari, Mitchell McLaren and David A. van Leeuwen, « The Effect of noise on modern automatic speaker recognition systems » , ICASSP 2012. [3] Anthony Larcher, Pierre-Michel Bousquet, Kong-Aik Lee, Driss Matrouf, Haizhou Li, Jean-François Bonastre, « I-vectors in the context of phonetically-constrained short utterances for speaker verification. » ICASSP 2012: 4773-4776. [4] M.P. Cooke, P.G. Green, L. Josifovski, and A. Vizinho, « Robust ASR with unreliable data and minimal assumptions, » in Proc., Robust’99, 1999 [5] M.P. Cooke, P.G. Green, L. Josifovski, and A. Vizinho, « Robust Automatic Speech Recognition with missing and unreliable acoustic data, » Speech Communication,, 2000. [6] B. Raj, M.L. Seltzer, and R.M. Stern, « Reconstruction of missing features for robust speech recognition, » Speech Communication, 2004.
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6-11 | (2013-06-03) 2 Ph D's Université d'AvignonLe labex Brain and Language Research Institute (BLRI) financera à la rentrée prochaine deux sujets
de thèse dont l'un des sujets pourra être celui proposé ci-dessous (en fonction des candidatures
retenues).
Calendrier :. date limite des candidatures : 10 juin.
auditions des candidats retenus : 24 juin
Bourse : 1 684.93€ brut mensuel (1 368€ nets)
Dossier des candidats :. CV détaillé. Notes. Motivation et/ou projet scientifique correspondant au sujet Contact scientifique : Corinne Fredouille et Christine Meunier
Contact administratif : nadera.bureau@blri.fr
Description du sujet :
Titre : Détection de zones de déviance dans la parole pathologique : apport du traitement automatique face à l'expertise humaine Superviseurs : Corinne Fredouille, Christine Meunier Laboratoire d'accueil : Laboratoire Informatique d'Avignon (collaboration avec le Laboratoire Parole et Langage –Aix-en-Provence) Discipline et école doctorale : Informatique, école doctorale ED536 de l'Université d'Avignon Calendrier : . date limite des candidatures : 10 juin . auditions des candidats retenus : 24 juin Bourse : 1 684.93€ brut mensuel (1 368€ nets) Description scientifique Si la définition de l'étendue de la variabilité en parole normale est une question fondamentale pour les théories linguistiques actuelles, une façon d'aborder ses limites est d'essayer de déterminer ses frontières par le biais de la variation pathologique. Comme le soulignent Duffy et Kent, 2001 « Science often takes advantages of nature’s accidents to learn the principles of a process ». Sur ce principe, la connaissance de la parole pathologique s'appuyant sur la compréhension des phénomènes d'altération « observables » dans la production de parole de patients atteints de troubles de la parole devient une nécessité. La parole dysarthrique correspond à une altération de la commande motrice d’origine centrale ou périphérique des gestes de la parole. Des variations importantes existent dans la parole dysarthrique en relation avec un déficit de l’exécution temporo-spatiale des mouvements de la parole et qui peuvent affecter différents niveaux de production (respiratoire, laryngé et supralaryngé). La grande majorité des travaux ayant porté sur l'étude de la parole dysarthrique repose sur des analyses perceptives. La raison principale tient dans le fait qu'un patient dysarthrique est dysarthrique parce qu'il « s'entend/a l'air » dysarthrique. Les travaux les plus connus au niveau international sont ceux de Darley et al., 1975. Ils ont conduit à l'élaboration d'une organisation des dysarthries en 6 classes (complétée par deux classes supplémentaires par Duffy, 1995) sur la base de clusters physiopathologiques définis à partir de la concomitance de caractéristiques les plus déviantes perçues par un jury d'écoute. L’hypothèse sous-jacente à la construction de ces clusters est qu’un ensemble de paramètres perturbés simultanément, mis en relation avec l’atteinte neurologique, reflèterait un processus physiopathologique particulier. Si cette classification reste d'actualité encore aujourd'hui pour évaluer notamment la parole dysarthrique en pratique clinique, elle reste néanmoins sujette à controverses pour deux raisons principales : la subjectivité des évaluations perceptives d'une manière générale et la difficulté pour un être humain, même expérimenté, à distinguer et à juger perceptivement les multiples dimensions à prendre en compte dans l'évaluation de la parole dysarthrique. En conséquence, différents travaux ont été menés à partir des années 80 à aujourd'hui dans l'objectif de combiner ces analyses perceptives à des méthodes plus objectives et quantitatives telles que les analyses instrumentales basées sur des mesures acoustiques ou physiologiques (revue de la littérature dans Kay, 2012). Si les analyses instrumentales peuvent s'appuyer sur des traitements semi- voire entièrement automatiques, l'analyse acoustique fine nécessaire pour comprendre les phénomènes déviants inhérents à la dysarthrie dans le signal de parole demeure encore très coûteuse en temps par un expert humain. Dans ce contexte, une grande part des études présentes dans la littérature repose soit sur un nombre très restreint de patients ou sur une pathologie bien ciblée. Pourtant, la grande variabilité des phénomènes déviants observés dans la parole dysarthrique en fonction de la pathologie du patient, de l'avancement de la maladie ou de la sévérité de la dysarthrie requiert d'analyser une large population de patients. L'objectif de cette thèse est d'étudier comment les outils du traitement automatique de la parole pourraient permettre de traiter de larges populations de patients dysarthriques et de focaliser l'attention des experts humains sur des zones de déviance bien identifiées du signal en vue d'analyses plus fines. Ces travaux reposeront notamment sur le système de transcription automatique du LIA et ses activités de recherche autour des mesures de qualité des transcriptions (Lecouteux, 2008 et Senay, 2011). La granularité de la détection des zones de déviance – ici potentiellement le mot ou la séquence de mots – sera dans un second temps affiner par des outils travaillant à des niveaux inférieurs allant jusqu'au phonème (Fredouille, 2011). Ces travaux devront tenter de répondre à différentes questions : • Face à la variabilité des phénomènes de déviance observés dans la parole dysarthrique et répertoriés dans la littérature, quels sont ceux qu'un système de détection automatique est capable de déceler ? • Est ce qu'un système automatique est capable de mettre en évidence les mêmes phénomènes de déviance qu'un expert humain lors d'une évaluation perceptive ? • Les déviances détectées par le système automatique sont-elles pertinentes pour les phonéticiens ? • Est-il possible de mettre en relation les déviances détectées avec la physiopathologie du patient (ex : indices hypokinéthiques pour la maladie de Parkinson, indices paralytiques pour la SLA, …) ? Les travaux autour du système de transcription automatique du LIA devraient également ouvrir des perspectives sur la mise en place d'un système de mesures objectives de l'intelligibilité des patients dysarthriques. Ces travaux de thèse seront réalisés dans le cadre d'une collaboration étroite entre le LIA (Corinne Fredouille) pour son expertise autour des systèmes automatiques, le LPL (Christine Meunier et Alain Ghio) pour son expertise sur les analyses acoustico-phonétiques et les évaluations perceptives, les hôpitaux de la Timone (Dr Danièle Robert) et des Pays d'Aix (François Viallet) pour leur expertise clinique. Ils seront basés sur le corpus de patients dysarthriques élaborés dans le cadre du projet ANR DesPhoAPady (2009-2012 – Fougeron, 2010). Ce corpus présente un large panel de patients souffrant de différentes pathologies (maladie de Parkinson, Sclérose Latérale Amiotrophique, syndrôme cérébelleux) et différents niveaux de sévérité de dysarthrie. Références : J. R. Duffy, R. D. Kent, « Darley's contributions to the understanding, differential diagnosis, and scientific study of the dysarthrias », Aphasiology 15(3):275 – 289, 2001. F. L. Darley, A. E. Aronson, J. R. Brown, « Motor Speech Disorders », Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1975. J. R. Duffy, « Motor speech disorders : substrates, differential diagnosis and management », Motsby- Yearbook, St Louis, 1e édition, 1995. T. S. Kay, « Spectral analysis of stop consonants in individuals with dysarthria secondary to stroke », PhD thesis, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, USA, 2012. B. Lecouteux, « Reconnaissance automatique de la parole guidée par des transcriptions a priori », Thèse de doctorat, Université d'Avignon et des Pays Vaucluse, 2008. G. Senay, « Approches semi-automatiques pour la recherche d’information dans les documents audio », Thèse de doctorat, Université d'Avignon et des Pays Vaucluse, 2011. C. Fredouille, G. Pouchoulin, « Automatic detection of abnormal zones in pathological speech », International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPHs'11), Hong Kong, 17-21 Août 2011. C. Fougeron et al., « Developing an acoustic-phonetic characterization of dysarthric speech in French », LREC'10 (international conference on Language Resources and Evaluation), Malte, Mai 2010. Dossier des candidats : . CV détaillé . Notes . Motivation et/ou projet scientifique correspondant au sujet Contact scientifique : Corinne Fredouille et Christine Meunier Contact administratif : nadera.bureau@blri.fr
Title: Detection of deviant zones in pathological speech : contribution of the automatic speech processing against the Human expertise Supervisor : Corinne Fredouille, Christine Meunier Host laboratory : Laboratoire Informatique d'Avignon (collaboration with the Laboratoire Parole et Langage – Aix-en-Provence) Field and doctoral school : computer sciences, doctoral school ED536 of the University of Avignon Date : . deadline for the application : 10th of june . auditions of chosen candidates : 24th of june Grant : 1 684.93€ montly gross (1 368€ net) Scientific description If the definition of the variability range in normal speech is a key issue for the current linguistic theories, a way of dealing with its limits is to attempt to determine its frontiers through pathological variation. As reported by Duffy and Kent, 2001 « Science often takes advantages of nature’s accidents to learn the principles of a process ». Based on this, the knowledge of the pathological speech, based on the understanding of alteration phenomena, « observable » on the speech production of patients suffering of speech disorders becomes a necessity. Dysarthria is a group of speech disorders resulting from neurological impairments of speech motor control. Substantial variations occur in dysarthric speech due to a deficit in the spatio-temporal execution of speech movements that affects different levels of speech production (respiratory, laryngeal and supralaryngeal). The vast majority of research work dedicated to the study of the dysarthric speech relies on perceptual analyses. The main reason is that a dysarthric patient is dysarthric because he/she sounds dysarthric. The most known study, at international level, was done by Darley et al., 1975. This work leads to organize dysarthria into 6 classes (completed with 2 additional classes by Duffy, 1995) on the basis of physiopathological clusters defined from the co-occurrences of the most deviant features perceived by a perceptual jury. The hypothesis underlying the building of these clusters is that a set of simultaneously disturbed features, connected with the neurological injuries, should reflect a typical physiopathological process. If this classification is still used nowadays to evaluate dysarthric speech in clinical practice notably, it remains controversal for a couple of reasons : the subjectivity of perceptual evaluation and the difficulty for a Human being, even with a high expertise, of distinguishing and assessing perceptually the multiple dimensions to take into account when dealing with dysarthric speech. Consequently, different research work has been conducted since the 1980s until now which aims at combining these perceptual analyses with more objective and quantitative approaches such as the instrumental analyses based on acoustic or physiological measure (review of the literature can be found in Kay, 2012). Contrary to the instrumental analyses which can rely on some semi- or full-automatic process, in-depth acoustic analysis of speech necessary to understand the deviant phenomena related to dysarthria still remains very timeconsuming for a Human expert. Based on this, a signifiant proportion of studies in the literature are conducted on a limited number of patients or on a focused pathology. However, the large variability of deviant phenomena observed in dysarthric speech according to the patient’s pathology, the stage of the disease, or the dysarthria severity require the analysis of a large patient population. The aim of this thesis is to study how the automatic speech processing tools could permit to treat large populations of dysarthric patients and to focus Human experts’ attention on speech zones well identified as deviant for further in-depth analyses. This work will rely on the automatic speech transcription developed at the LIA and its activities on the quality measure of transcriptions (Lecouteux, 2008 et Senay, 2011). The granularity of the deviant zone detection – here the word or set of words – will be refined, in a second step, by applying existing detection tools working at lower levels like the phoneme (Fredouille, 2011). This work will attempt to answer the following key issues : • Given the variability of deviant phenomena observed on dysarthric speech and reported in literature, which ones is an automatic detection system able to capture ? • Is an automatic system able to highlight the same deviant phenomena as a Human expert will detect perceptually ? • Are deviant speech zones detected by an automatic system relevant for a phonetician ? • Does a correlation between the type of deviant phenomena detected and the patient’s physiopathology exist (e.g : hypokinetic feature for the Parkinson disease, paralytic features for ALS, …) ? Studies relating to the automatic speech transcription should open up new perspectives on the implementation of an objective system dedicated to the evaluation of the dysarthric patient’s intelligibility. This thesis work will be carried out within a close collaboration between the LIA (Corinne Fredouille) for her expertise on the automatic system dedicated to speech processing, the LPL (Christine Meunier and Alain Ghio) for their expertise on acoustic-phonetic analyses and perceptual evaluations, both the hospitals of La Timone (Dr Danièle Robert) and desPays d’Aix (Pr. François Viallet) for their clinical expertise. It will be based on the dysarthric patient corpus designed for the ANR DesPhoAPady project (2009-2012 – Fougeron, 2010). This corpus includes a large population of patients suffering from various pathologies (Parkinson disease, ALS, cerebelar syndrom, …) and different levels of dysarthria severity. Bibliography : J. R. Duffy, R. D. Kent, « Darley's contributions to the understanding, differential diagnosis, and scientific study of the dysarthrias », Aphasiology 15(3):275 – 289, 2001. F. L. Darley, A. E. Aronson, J. R. Brown, « Motor Speech Disorders », Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1975. J. R. Duffy, « Motor speech disorders : substrates, differential diagnosis and management », Motsby- Yearbook, St Louis, 1e édition, 1995. T. S. Kay, « Spectral analysis of stop consonants in individuals with dysarthria secondary to stroke », PhD thesis, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, USA, 2012. B. Lecouteux, « Reconnaissance automatique de la parole guidée par des transcriptions a priori », Thèse de doctorat, Université d'Avignon et des Pays Vaucluse, 2008. G. Senay, « Approches semi-automatiques pour la recherche d’information dans les documents audio », Thèse de doctorat, Université d'Avignon et des Pays Vaucluse, 2011. C. Fredouille, G. Pouchoulin, « Automatic detection of abnormal zones in pathological speech », International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPHs'11), Hong Kong, 17-21 Août 2011. C. Fougeron et al., « Developing an acoustic-phonetic characterization of dysarthric speech in French », LREC'10 (international conference on Language Resources and Evaluation), Malte, Mai 2010. Candidate application form : . detailed CV . marks . Motivation and/or scientific project related to the topic Scientific Contact : Corinne Fredouille et Christine Meunier Administrative Contact : nadera.bureau@blri.fr
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6-12 | (2013-05-16) Internships in Natural Language Processing and Machine Translation, Dublin City University, Ireland At the Centre for Next Generation Localisation (CNGL) in Dublin, Ireland, we have a number of internships available covering a wide range of topics in Natural Language Processing and Machine Translation based at our Dublin City University site. The internships are available for both basic research and more applied research projects (including development-focused work).
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6-13 | (2013-05-17) Speech Technology Researcher/Developer (main focus ASR) , Liguwerk GmbH Dresden Germany vacant position as a Dr.-Ing. Rico Petrick
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6-14 | (2013-06-05) Specialist in speech processing, CUI/University of Geneva The CUI/University of Geneva seeks a qualified candidate for one
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6-15 | (2013-06-12) Specialist in speech processing- CUI/University of Geneva Switzerland The CUI/University of Geneva seeks a qualified candidate for one Jean-Philippe.Goldman@unige.ch
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6-16 | (2013-06-16) Faculty position at CSLP, Johns Hopkins University Baltimore CLSP Faculty Position
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6-17 | (2013-06-18) Thèse financée au GIPSA lab Grenoble Le Département Parole et Cognition du GIPSA-lab (www.gipsa-lab.inpg.fr/recherche/departement-parole-cognition.php) Le
Compétences recherchées :
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Encadrement : Ce sujet sera co-dirigé par Anne Vilain du Département Parole et Cognition du laboratoire GIPSA-lab et Michel Hoen de l’équipe DYCOG (Dynamique Cérébrale et Cognition) du Centre de recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon (U1028/UMR5292), en collaboration avec le Laboratoire de Psychologie et NeuroCognition de Grenoble.
Les candidatures (CV détaillé + lettre de motivation sont à envoyer à Anne.Vilain@gipsa-lab.grenoble-inp.fr) avant le 25 juin 2013. Elles donneront lieu à une pré-sélection avant entretien.
Détail du sujet :
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Mots-clés : handicap auditif - implant cochléaire – relations perception / production en parole – trouble du développement du langage – qualité de vie des enfants implantés
-- Anne Vilain Departement Parole et Cognition Laboratoire GIPSA-lab Universite Stendhal BP 25 38040 Grenoble cedex 9 tél: 00 33 4 76 82 77 85 fax: 00 33 4 76 82 43 35
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6-18 | (2013-06-19) PhD positions - Computer Science, Natural Language Processing - Marseille, France PhD positions - Computer Science, Natural Language Processing - Marseille, France
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6-19 | (2013-06-19) Post-doc au LIMSI-CNRS Orsay, FrancePost-doc au LIMSI-CNRS pour le projet ANR DIADEMS
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Profil de poste :
CDD de 24 mois au laboratoire LACITO-CNRS
Niveau : Ingénieur d’études Contribution à la constitution de corpus de langues rares : textes et
dictionnaires en ligne
CONTEXTE Le projet HimalCo, financé par l’Agence Nationale de la
(2013-2015), porte sur la constitution et l’exploitation de corpus pour dix langues à tradition orale.
Les corpus sont composés de ressources sonores (enregistrements audio), textuelles (transcription,
annotations) ainsi que de données lexicales
(dictionnaires et enregistrements de mots) : http://himalco.hypotheses.org/
Les corpus et les outils issus du projet HimalCo iront à terme alimenter la plateforme de
la collection Pangloss qui regroupe elle-même plus de 70 corpus de
langues rares : http://lacito.vjf.cnrs.fr/archivage/index.htm
MISSIONS La personne recrutée en CDD travaillera en étroite collaboration avec l’ingénieur
responsable de la Collection Pangloss et participant au projet HimalCo. Elle devra rapidement
faire preuve d’autonomie dans la réalisation des tâches qui lui sont confiées. Les tâches à effectuer
pour le projet sont diverses. Voici une liste non exhaustive :
- traitement et mise en forme des corpus : suivi des tâches, gestion des contacts avec les déposants,
alignement texte/son, préparation et vérification de métadonnées...
- dépôt de documents à l’archivage pérenne et mise à jour des pages web correspondantes sur le
site de la Collection Pangloss
- développement de fonctionnalités en ligne pour la consultation des textes parallèles et des
dictionnaires
- développement d’outils et mise à jour d’outils existants pour la mise en forme, la diffusion et
la recherche dans les corpus
- dialogue avec les partenaires de la Collection Pangloss
- déploiement d’un outil logiciel de suivi des tâches (de la prise de contact initiale jusqu’au dépôt final) si le temps nécessaire peut être dégagé COMPETENCES - Connaissances en structuration de données textuelles (HTML, XML, XSL) et sonores (wav). - PHP - Perl - Java souhaité Capacité d’écoute pour comprendre les besoins et les pratiques des linguistes. Une expérience de l’étude et/ou du traitement de données linguistiques serait un plus. DUREE ET DATES La durée totale du contrat est de 24 mois. Les dates prévues sont : de novembre 2013 à octobre 2015 inclus. La date de début peut être avancée à septembre ou octobre 2013 si la personne recrutée le souhaite. Aucun engagement ne peut être pris concernant une prolongation du contrat au-delà de 24 mois : les possibilités sont soumises aux contingences des futurs Appels à projets de recherche (pour les CDD) et des créations de poste (pour les CDI).
Contact : guillaume@vjf.cnrs.fr
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The European Language resources Distribution Agency (ELDA), a company specialized in Human Language Technologies within an international context, acting as the distribution agency of the European Language Resources Association (ELRA), is currently seeking to fill an immediate vacancy for Technical Engineer/Scientist (Project Manager) position, specialized in Speech and Multimodal technologies.
Technical Engineer / Scientist (Project Manager) in Speech and Multimodal Technologies
Under the supervision of the CEO, the responsibilities of the Technical Engineer/Scientist include designing/specifying language resources, setting up production frameworks and platforms, carrying out quality control and assessment. He/she will be in charge of renovating the current language resources production workflows. This yields excellent opportunities for young, creative, and motivated candidates wishing to participate actively to the Language Engineering field. He/she will be in charge of conducting the activities related to language resources and Natural Language Processing technologies. The task will mostly consist in managing language resources production projects and co-ordinating ELDA’s participation in R&D projects while being also hands-on whenever required by the development team.
Profile :
Applications will be considered until the position is filled. The position is based in Paris.
Salary : Commensurate with qualifications and experience.
Applicants should email a cover letter addressing the points listed above together with a curriculum vitae to :
Khalid Choukri
ELRA / ELDA
55-57, rue Brillat-Savarin
75013 Paris
FRANCE
Fax : 01 43 13 33 30
Mail : job@elda.org
ELRA was established in February 1995, with the support of the European Commission, to promote the development and exploitation of Language Resources (LRs). Language Resources include all data necessary for language engineering, such as monolingual and multilingual lexica, text corpora, speech databases and terminology. The role of this non-profit membership Association is to promote the production of LRs, to collect and to validate them and, foremost, make them available to users. The association also gathers information on market needs and trends.
For further information about ELDA/ELRA, visit :
http://www.elda.org
http://www.elra.info
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aVisiting Research Engineer
Linguistics Research Labs
The School of Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has an opening for a full-time (100%) Visiting Research Engineer in its linguistics research labs. The Visiting Research Engineer works directly with faculty and graduate students to identify, implement and maintain appropriate hardware and software for research within the School of Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics. Currently, the labs have facilities for high-quality audio and video capture, eye-tracking, speech aerodynamics, electropalatography, and event-related potentials: Phonetics and Phonology Lab (http://phonlab.linguistics.illinois.edu/); Second Language Acquisition Lab (http://www.bilingualismlab.illinois.edu/); Discourse, Social Interaction, and Translation Lab; Electrophysiology and Language Processing Lab. The position is renewable for an additional two years and is contingent on funding and strong annual performance reviews by the School of Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics. The position may become regular at a later date. The target starting date is September 1, 2013. Salary is commensurate with qualifications and experience.
Responsibilities will be research-related only and will include: Training faculty and graduate student researchers in the use of hardware and software for research purposes (including occasional workshops); Holding scheduled consultations with faculty and graduate student researchers on their research projects; Oversight of data acquisition hardware; Assisting faculty and graduate student researchers in problem-solving hardware and software issues; Providing support to faculty and graduate student researchers in procedural programming languages (e.g., Python, R, Matlab); Helping standardize computing and programming procedures across labs; Database management; Digital signal processing; and Assistance with initial setup of pilot experiments.
At a minimum, qualified applicants must have a MA/MS in linguistics or closely related fields, (e.g., neuroscience, psychology, speech and hearing science with a concentration in linguistics or speech-related research). The applicant should also have a solid background in a procedural programming language (e.g., Python, Matlab, and/or R) and statistical modeling. Preference will be given to candidates who have previously worked in a laboratory setting, have a demonstrated ability to work well as part of a research team, and have experience using advanced hardware for data acquisition.
To apply, create your candidate profile through the University of Illinois application login page at https://jobs.illinois.edu and upload your application materials: letter of application, CV, and names and contact information for three professional references. Referees will be contacted electronically upon submission of the application. Only electronic applications submitted through https://jobs.illinois.edu will be accepted.
To ensure full consideration, all required applicant materials must be received no later than July 22, 2013. Letters of reference must be received no later than July 29, 2013. The department highly recommends that complete applications be submitted prior to July 22, to ensure that referees have enough time to submit their letters of recommendation.
For additional information, please contact slcl-hr@illinois.edu. Applicants may be interviewed before the closing date; however, no hiring decision will be made until after that date.
Illinois is an Affirmative Action /Equal Opportunity Employer and welcomes individuals with diverse backgrounds, experiences, and ideas who embrace and value diversity and inclusivity. (www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu).
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The Department of Speech, Music and Hearing at KTH, Stockholm, Sweden, will hire 1-2 Assistant Professors in Speech Technology (main focus Dialogue Systems)
http://www.kth.se/en/om/work-at-kth/vacancies/assistant-professor-in-speech-technology-with-specialization-in-dialogue-systems-1.398565
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VoiceBox is an acknowledged pioneer in the voice technology and application industry. Our
continued growth allows us to add to our diverse team of talented professionals.
Our opportunity is
your opportunity!
Because we work with some of the most respected brands in the world, you’ll not only work to high
standards but you’ll also get that “hey, I worked on that product” feeling. Even better, we’re small
enough for you to make a real impact - you’ll learn and grow quickly and never have that cog-in-thewheel-feeling.
We’re glad you’re considering joining the team!
SPEECH SCIENTIST
A Speech Scientist at Voicebox’s Research and Advanced Development Team is responsible for work
on complex tasks and work packages independently and provide a solution to the team. Work
packages in the area of ASR, TTS and NLU in research as well as project related. Typical work
packages are:
•
Tuning and maintaining speech applications
•
Design and develop new speech applications
•
Adapt speech resources for certain customers’ requirements
•
Research, Development and Implementation of new algorithms in ASR, TTS and NLU.
•
Software Integration of third party ASR or TTS products in VoiceBox Engine
•
Training and adaptation of acoustic models and language models
This position can be located in Germany, Munich or USA, Seattle Area
Key Requirements/Skills/Experience
•
Strong knowledge in ASR, TTS and NLU as well as statistical learning methods
•
Strong plus: Experience in ASR Training-Toolkits, like HTK
•
Strong plus: Working experience on ASR topics: e.g. as intern, for PHD
•
Deep knowledge in digital signal processing
•
Deep knowledge in programming languages like: Ansi-C, C++
•
Knowledge in scripting languages like: Perl, Python, Shell (bash, awk, sed)
•
Excellent communication skills, great attitude and team oriented
•
Good skills in English (Text and Spoken)
•
Foreign language skills a plus
•
Self-starter
To apply for this position, please send your resume to michaelw@voicebox.com.
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Two positions in the area human machine dialog at Saarland University
We anticipate the availability of funds for two positions in the area of
dialog modeling and dialogue system design, one position for a PhD
candidate and a second position for a postdoctoral researcher.
The aim of the research project is to the development and testing of a
multimodal dialogue system for highly adaptive and flexible dialogue
management. Dialogue system will be designed to support negotiation
training games with the real and virtual agents. The research will be
carried out together with a European consortium (FP7 Programme) of
high-profile research institutes and companies.
The successful candidate should have a degree in computer science,
computational linguistics or a discipline with a related background.
Excellent programming skills are reqired (preferably in Java and C++),
as well as strong analytical and problem-solving skills. Some experience
in math, logics and cognitive modelling is a plus. Very good oral and
written communication skills in English are also required.
The successful candidate for a postdoc position additionally should have
a strong publication record in relevant venues and strong collaborative
skills, including possibly supervision of junior researchers, students,
or equivalent industrial experience.
This work will be conducted at the Spoken Language Systems group
(http://www.lsv.uni-saarland.de/) at Saarland University.
Saarland University
Saarland University (http://www.uni-saarland.de/en/) is a European
leader in Computer Science research and teaching, and is particularly
well-known for its research in Computational Linguistics and Natural
Language Processing. In addition, the university campus hosts the
interdisciplinary MMCI Cluster of Excellence, Max Planck Institute for
Computer Science, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems and German
Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI). Students and
researchers come from many countries and the research language is
English.
Both positions are fully funded positions with a salary in the range of
37,000 Euros to 51,000 Euros per year depending on the qualification and
professional experience of the successful candidates. Starting date is
the November 1st. The PhD position is for three years. The postdoc
position is for 2 years with the possibility of extension for one more
year.
Each application should include:
* Curriculum Vitae including a list of publications
(if applicable)
* Transcript of records
* Short statement of interest (not more than half a
page)
* Names of two references
* Any other supporting information or documents
Applications (documents in PDF format in a single file) should be sent
no later than , Monday July 15th to:
Diana.Schreyer@LSV.Uni-Saarland.De
Further inquiries regarding the project should be directed to:
Olga.Petukhova@LSV.Uni-Saarland.De
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Postdoc position in the area of information retrieval and language
understanding at Saarland University
We are seeking a skilled postdoctoral researcher whose expertise
intersects information retrieval (IR) and human-computer interaction
(HCI).The researcher will work in a research team to create an automated
speech-based question-answering (QA) system for various scenarios. This
research will done in cooperation with high profile partners in the US
and Europe.
The successful applicant will have:
1) a doctoral degree in a relevant field of computational linguistics,
computer science, or a relevant discipline;
2) a strong publication record in relevant venues;
3) excellent programming skills;
4) strong collaborative skills, including possibly supervision of junior
researchers, students, or equivalent industrial experience;
5) a strong technical background in machine learning, natural language
processing, and human-computer interaction.
This work will be conducted at the Spoken Language Systems group
(http://www.lsv.uni-saarland.de/) at Saarland University.
Saarland University
Saarland University (http://www.uni-saarland.de/en/) is a European
leader in Computer Science research and teaching, and is particularly
well-known for its research in Computational Linguistics and Natural
Language Processing. In addition, the university campus hosts the
interdisciplinary MMCI Cluster of Excellence, Max Planck Institute for
Computer Science, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems and German
Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI). Students and
researchers come from many countries and the research language is
English.
The planned starting date is the November 1st (an earlier starting date
is negotiable). The position is for 2 years with the possibility of
extension for one more year. The position is a fully funded position
with a salary in the range of 37,000 Euros to 51,000 Euros per year
depending on the qualification and professional experience of the
successful candidates.
Each application should include:
* Curriculum Vitae including a list of publications (if applicable)
* Transcript of records
* Short statement of interest (not more than half a page)
* Names of two references
* Any other supporting information or documents
Applications (documents in PDF format in a single file) should be sent
no later than , Monday July 15th to:
Diana.Schreyer@LSV.Uni-Saarland.De
Further inquiries regarding the project should be directed to:
Olga.Petukhova@LSV.Uni-Saarland.De
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### Postdoctoral position at TTI-Chicago ###
A postdoctoral position is available at TTI-Chicago on topics at the intersection of speech processing and machine learning. The ideal candidate will have completed (or be about to complete) a PhD degree in computer science, electrical engineering, statistics, speech and language technologies, or a related field, and strong mathematical and experimental skills. The main duties of the postdoc will be his/her research activities in collaboration with his/her supervisor and other collaborators at TTI-Chicago and beyond; opportunities for teaching and advising may also be available if desired.
To apply, or for additional information, please contact Karen Livescu atmailto:klivescu@uchicago.edu.
TTI-Chicago is a philanthropically endowed academic computer science institute with an accredited PhD program situated on the University of Chicago campus.
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INRIA Nancy Grand-Est (Nancy, France) - Speech Group, LORIA
Postdoctoral position
Accurate 3D Lip modeling and control in the context of animating a 3D talking head
Scientific Context
The lips play a significant role in audiovisual human communication. Several studies showed the
important contribution of the lips to the intelligibility of visual speech (Sumby & Pollack, 1954; Cohen
& Massaro 1990). In fact, it has been shown that human lips alone carry more than half the visual
information provided by the face (Benoît,1996). Since the beginning of the development of 3D virtual
talking heads, researchers showed interest to model lips (Guiard-Marigny et al., 1996, Reveret &
Benoît, 1998), as the lips increase intelligibility of the visual message. The existing models are still
considered as pure parametric and numerical models and do not take into account the dynamic
characteristic of speech. As audiovisual speech is highly dynamics, we consider that modeling this
aspect is crucial to provide a lip model that is accurately animated, and reflects the real articulatory
dynamics as observed in human vocal tract. In fact, the movement of the lips, even subtle, can
communicate relevant information to the human receiver. This is even more crucial for some
population such as hard-of-hearing people.
Missions
The goal of this work is to develop an accurate 3D lip model that can be integrated within a talking
head. A control model will also be developed. The lip model should be as accurate dynamically as
possible. When designing this model, the focus will be on the dynamics. For this reason, one can
start from a static 3D lip mesh, using a generic 3D lip model, and then we will use MRI images or 3D
scans to obtain more realistic shape of the lips. To take into account the dynamic aspect of the lip
deformation, we will use an articulograph (EMA) and motion capture technique to track sensors or
markers on the lips. The mesh will be adapted to this data. To control the lips, we will consider
allowing a skeletal animation to be controlled by the EMA sensors or motion capture markers, using
inverse kinematic technique, widely used in 3D modeling. In line with conventional skeletal animation,
an articulated armature rigged inside the mesh is mapped to vertex groups on the lip mesh by a
weight map that can be defined automatically from the envelope of the armature's shape and
manually adjusted if required, where manipulating the armature's components deforms the
surrounding mesh accordingly. The main challenge is to find the best topology of the sensors or
markers on the lips, to be able to better capture accurately its dynamics. The main outcome is to
accurately model and animate the lips based on articulatory data. It is very important to have
readable lips in that can be lip-read by hard-of-hearing people.
Bibliography
C. Benoît (1996). On the Production and the Perception of Audio-Visual Speech by Man and Machine.
Multimedia Communications and Video Coding, pp 277-284.
M. M. Cohen & D. W. Massaro (1990), Synthesis of visible speech. Behavioral Research Methods and
Instrumentation, 22, 260-263.
T. Guiard-Marigny, N. Tsingos, A. Adjoudani, C. Benoit, M.-P. Cani (1996). 3D Models of the Lips for Realistic
Speech Animation. Computer Animation 80-89
L. Reveret, C. Benoit (1998). A New 3D Lip Model for Analysis and Synthesis of Lip Motion in Speech
Production. Proc. AVSP'98, Terrigal, Australia, Dec. 4-6, 1998.
Sumby, W. H., & Pollack, I. (1954). Visual contribution to speech intelligibility in noise. Journal of Acoustic
Society of America, 26, 212-215.
Q. Summerfield (1987), 'Some preliminaries to a comprehensive account of audio-visual speech perception', In:
B. Dodd and R. Campbell, Editors, Hearing by Eye: The Psychology of Lip-Reading, Lawrence Erlbaum,
Hillsdale, NJ.
Competences
Required qualification: PhD in computer science Appropriate candidate would have good knowledge
in 3D modeling, speech processing and data analysis, as well as solid java programming skills.
Additional Information
Application deadline: 11 June 2013
Supervision and contact:
Slim Ouni ( Slim.Ouni@loria.fr ) http://www.loria.fr/~slim
Duration:
1 year (possibly extendable)
Starting date:
between Sept. 1st 2013 and Jan. 1st 2014
Salary:
2.620 euros gross monthly (about 2.135 euros net) medical insurance included.
Application Procedure
The required documents for an INRIA postdoc application are the following:
- CV, including a description of your research activities (2 pages max) and a short description of
what you consider to be your best contributions and why (1 page max and 3 contributions max); the
contributions could be theoretical, implementation, or industry transfers. Include also a brief
description of your scientific and career projects.
- The report(s) from your PhD external reviewer(s), if applicable.
- If you haven't defended yet, the list of expected members of your PhD committee (if known) and the
expected date of defense (the defense, not the manuscript submission).
- Your best publications, up to 3.
- At least one recommendation letter from your PhD advisor, and possibly up to two other letters. The
recommendation letter(s) should be sent directly by their author to the prospective postdoc advisor
All these documents should be sent
before June 11th
About INRIA
Established in 1967, Inria is the only public research body fully dedicated to computational sciences.
Combining computer sciences with mathematics, Inria’s 3,400 researchers strive to invent the digital
technologies of the future. Educated at leading international universities, they creatively integrate
basic research with applied research and dedicate themselves to solving real problems, collaborating
with the main players in public and private research in France and abroad and transferring the fruits of
their work to innovative companies. The researchers at Inria published over 4,800 articles in 2010.
They are behind over 270 active patents and 105 start-ups. The 171 project teams are distributed in
eight research centers located throughout France.
http://www.inria.fr/en/centre/nancy
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The MxR Lab at the University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies, located in Playa Vista, CA, is seeking a postdoctoral researcher. Applicants should have a Ph.D.in computer science or related field and a strong research background in HCI, virtual environments, virtual humans, data visualization, novel user interfaces, or a similar area.
The University of Southern California (USC), founded in 1880, is located in the heart of downtown L.A. and is the largest private employer in the City of Los Angeles. As an employee of USC, you will be a part of a world-class research university and a member of the 'Trojan Family,' which is comprised of the faculty, students and staff that make the university what it is.
Initial appointment will be for one year with the possibility of renewal for subsequent years. Please direct all inquiries to Evan Suma (suma@ict.usc.edu).
Applicants can apply online at:
http://jobs.usc.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=70781
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un poste d'ATER en informatique est disponible à l'UFR de Sociologie et d'Informatique pour les Sciences Humaines de l'Université Paris Sorbonne.
Le candidat enseignera l’Informatique dans les différentes formations de licence et de master du département d’Informatique, Mathématiques et de Linguistique appliquées. Il devra s'inscrire dans un ou plusieurs axes de l'équipe de linguistique computationnelle (www.stih.paris-sorbonne.fr/) : Sémantiques et connaissances, Paralinguistique de la parole et du texte, Jugements d’évaluation, opinions et sentiments.
La date limite de candidature est le 4 septembre 2013.
Personne à contacter : Claude.Montacie@Paris-Sorbonne.fr
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PhD Title: Birdsong Forensics for Species Identification and Separation
Studentship: Full Scholarship, including fees (EU/Non EU) plus annual stipend of €16,000.
Start Date: Sept 2nd 2013
PhD Supervisor: Dr. Naomi Harte, Sigmedia Group, Electronic & Electrical Engineering, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Collaborator: Dr. Nicola Marples, Zoology, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Background:
The analysis of birdsong has increased in the speech processing community in the past 5 years. Much of the reported research has concentrated on the identification of bird species from their songs or calls. Smartphone apps have been developed that claim to automatically identify a bird species from a live recording taken by the user. A lesser reported topic is the analysis of birdsongs from subspecies of the
same bird. Among experts, bird song is considered a particularly effective way of comparing birds at species level. Differences in song may help uncover cryptic species. In many species, such as those living in the high canopy, catching the birds in order to obtain morphological (e.g. weight, bill length, wing length etc.) and genetic data may be time consuming and expensive. Identifying potentially interesting populations by the detection of song differences, allows any such effort to be better targeted.
Birdsong presents many unique challenges as a signal. The use of signal processing and machine learning techniques for birdsong analysis is at a very early stage within the ornithological research community. This PhD project seeks to lead the way in defining the state of the art for forensic birdsong analysis. Comparing birdsongs will push out the boundaries of feature analysis and classification techniques in signal processing. The research will develop new algorithms to systematically quantify levels of similarity in birdsong, transforming the comparison of birdsong in the natural sciences arena. The results will be of importance internationally for the study, monitoring, and conservation of bird populations.
Requirements:
The ideal candidate for this position will:
Have a primary degree (first class honours) in Electronic Engineering, Electronic and Computer Engineering or a closely related discipline.
Possess strong written and oral communication skills in English.
Have a strong background and interest in digital signal processing (DSP)
Be mathematically minded, and be curious about nature.
Experience in Matlab is a distinct advantage.
Application:
Interested candidates should send an email to Dr. Naomi Harte at nharte@tcd.ie. The email
MUST include the following:
Candidate CV (max 2 pages)
A short statement of motivation (half page)
Scanned academic transcripts
Name and contact details for TWO academic referees
Incomplete applications may not be considered.
About the Sigmedia Group at TCD Dr. Naomi Harte is an expert in Human Speech Communication. Her principal areas of focus are audio visual speech processing, speaker verification for biometrics and forensics, emotion in speech, speech processing in hearing aids and speech quality. She is a leader of the Sigmedia Group at TCD (www.sigmedia.tv) within the School of Engineering. Over the past 5 years, Sigmedia has been awarded research income of over €3million and published 73 peer reviewed papers. The group currently has 3 academic and 3 post-doctoral staff along with 12 research students. The work of Sigmedia is supported by research grants from Science Foundation Ireland, Enterprise Ireland, Irish Research Council, Google and DTS.
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Research Assistant in Computational Psycholinguistics
The Department of Linguistics at the University of Maryland is looking to fill a full-time
position for a post-baccalaureate researcher, starting September 1, 2013 or as soon as
possible thereafter. Salary is competitive, with benefits included. This person will be
involved in computational psycholinguistics research, with a focus on using techniques
from automatic speech recognition to better understand human speech perception. The
person will have the opportunity to develop skills in Bayesian modeling and signal
processing and will be part of a vibrant language science community that numbers 200
faculty, researchers, and graduate students across 10 departments.
The position would be ideal for individuals with a BA degree who are interested in
gaining significant research experience in a very active research group as preparation for
a research career. Applicants must be US or Canadian citizens or permanent residents,
and should have completed a BA or BS degree by the time of appointment. Previous
experience in cognitive science as well as familiarity with mathematics, computer
science, or signal processing is preferred. This is a 1 year initial appointment with
possibility of extension.
Applicants should submit a cover letter outlining relevant background and interests, a
current CV, and names and contact information for 3 potential referees. Reference letters
are not needed as part of the initial application. Applicants should also send a writing
sample. Applications should be submitted by email to Dr. Naomi Feldman,
nhf@umd.edu
, with 'Research Assistantship' in the subject line. Review of applications
will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.
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Research Assistant in Computational Psycholinguistics
The Department of Linguistics at the University of Maryland is looking to fill a full-time
position for a post-baccalaureate researcher, starting September 1, 2013 or as soon as
possible thereafter. Salary is competitive, with benefits included. This person will be
involved in computational psycholinguistics research, with a focus on using techniques
from automatic speech recognition to better understand human speech perception. The
person will have the opportunity to develop skills in Bayesian modeling and signal
processing and will be part of a vibrant language science community that numbers 200
faculty, researchers, and graduate students across 10 departments.
The position would be ideal for individuals with a BA degree who are interested in
gaining significant research experience in a very active research group as preparation for
a research career. Applicants must be US or Canadian citizens or permanent residents,
and should have completed a BA or BS degree by the time of appointment. Previous
experience in cognitive science as well as familiarity with mathematics, computer
science, or signal processing is preferred. This is a 1 year initial appointment with
possibility of extension.
Applicants should submit a cover letter outlining relevant background and interests, a
current CV, and names and contact information for 3 potential referees. Reference letters
are not needed as part of the initial application. Applicants should also send a writing
sample. Applications should be submitted by email to Dr. Naomi Feldman,
nhf@umd.edu
, with 'Research Assistantship' in the subject line. Review of applications
will begin immediately and will continue until the position is filled.
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SPEECH RESEARCHER A Speech Researcher at VOCALIZE will be responsible for complex tasks and for providing solutions to the team. The work will be related to the area of Text-to-Speech, Transcription, Speech Recognition, Speech Analytics and Natural Language Processing. Typical works will be: •Research, Development and Implementation of new algorithms in Text-to-Speech, Transcription, Speech Recognition,Speech Analytics and Natural Language Processing; •Create/develop new innovative solutions/products/applications; •Training and adaptation of acoustic models and language models; Key Requirements/Skills/Experience •PhD or Master degree in Engineering, Computer Science or Computational Linguistics; •Strong knowledge in Text-to-Speech, Transcription/Speech Recognition/Speech Analytics and Natural Language Processing as well as statistical learning methods; •Strong plus: Experience in Speech Recognition Training-Toolkits, like HTK, etc; •Deep knowledge in digital signal processing; •Deep knowledge in programming languages like: Ansi-C, C++; •Knowledge in scripting languages like: Python, Shell (bash, awk, sed); •Excellent communication skills, great attitude and team oriented; •Good skills in English (Text and Spoken); •Good skills in Portuguese and Spanish is a plus.
To apply for this position, please send your CV and cover letter to: vocalize.oportunidades@e-vocalize.com.br.
VOCALIZE is a growing and dynamic Speech and Language Technology Company located in Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil (http://www.e-vocalize.com.br). We are looking for talented Speech Researchers to create/develop New Algorithms to be added to our Core Technologies and to create Innovative solutions/products/applications to both the Brazilian and the Global market. We’re glad you’re considering joining the VOCALIZE team!
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PhD vacancy in project CHASING
Vacancy for a PhD in the project CHASING: CHAllenging Speech training In
Neurological patients by interactive Gaming
For more (up-to-date) information, see:
http://hstrik.ruhosting.nl/chasing-phd-vacancy/
http://hstrik.ruhosting.nl/chasing/
* Requirements
+ Degree in Computational or Applied Linguistics, Computer Science,
Artificial Intelligence, Informatics, Cognitive Science, or Education
+ Programming skills, e.g. Python, Java, html5, php, javascript,
flash, C[++]
+ An interest in e-Health, esp. gaming and speech technology for
speech training
+ A good command of the English language. Knowledge of Dutch is
considered an advantage.
+ Good communicative abilities
+ Willingness to work in an international, multidisciplinary team
* Job description
As a PhD student you will take part in the research project CHASING:
‘CHAllenging Speech training In Neurological patients through
Interactive Gaming’. The goal of this project is to investigate the
potentials of e-Health applications for speech training for neurological
patients. Current results indicate the need to develop advanced,
motivating training devices that provide guidance on articulation
improvement and that allow the integrated benefits of intensified,
independent speech training. Serious games are known to have strong
motivational power. In this research project we aim to investigate to
what extent serious games and game principles motivate and support
neurological patients in speech training. To this end, an interactive,
intuitive, user adaptive game for speech training which employs advanced
speech technology and which is compatible with mobile platforms will be
developed and tested.
You will first develop dedicated speech technology, esp. ‘automatic
speech recognition’ (ASR) technology, and integrate it in the game.
Next, you will carry out experiments with neurological patients, to
study the effects of the game and how the game (incl. the speech
technology) can be improved.
You are expected to start in the fall of 2013. It is a full time
position for 4 years.
You will be part of a dynamic international and interdisciplinary team
and will work in an inspiring research environment.
* Contact persons
+ Helmer Strik
w.strik@let.ru.nl
+31 24 3616104
+ Lilian Beijer
L.beijer@maartenskliniek.nl
+31 24 3659718 / 3659140
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Doctoral/Post-Doctoral Position (E13) in the field of Computational Pragmatics,
up to three years, starting autumn 2013
at the Center of Excellence ‘Cognitive Interaction Technology’ (CITEC) at
Bielefeld University, Germany,
in the project:
“Computational Pragmatics -- Multimodal Intention Processing”.
We are seeking a highly-motivated candidate with a degree (Master‘s or Ph.D.)
in Linguistics/Psycholinguistics or Cognitive Science/Artificial Intelligence with experience
in computational modeling of interactive systems. The successful applicant should have
a theoretical or applied background in dialogue, intention recognition/pragmatics, as well
as interpretation or generation of multimodal communicative behavior. Experiences
with conducting empirical studies and experiments would be favorable. Given
the multidisciplinary nature of the project, the ideal candidate should be prepared to
acquire new knowledge in the fields of psycholinguistics/computational linguistics,
cognitive science, and especially speech-accompanying gestures. Excellent command of
English is required.
The Center of Excellence 'Cognitive Interaction Technology' (CITEC) at Bielefeld
University, Germany, conducts interdisciplinary research into understanding the
functional processes of cognitive interaction with the goal of replicating them in technical
systems, including developing relevant evaluation methodologies and toolkits. For more
details, see
www.cit-ec.de. Within CITEC, this interdisciplinary project involves the
research groups “Psycholinguistics” (Faculty of Linguistics & Literary Studies) and
'Sociable Agents' (Faculty of Technology). General information about the labs can
be found at
http://www.uni-bielefeld.de/lili/personen/jruiter and http://www.techfak.unibielefeld.
de/ags/soa/
respectively.
Applicants should submit the following documents:
• a cover letter indicating research interests, academic education and past research
• curriculum vitae including list of publications
• sample publications (if available)
• letters of recommendation (if available)
Applications from suitably qualified handicapped and severely handicapped persons are
expressly encouraged.
Bielefeld University has received a number of awards for its achievements in the provision
of equal opportunity and has been recognised as a family friendly university. The
University welcomes applications from women. This is particularly true with regard both to
academic and technical posts as well as positions in Information Technology and trades
and crafts. Applications are handled according to the provisions of the state
equal opportunity statutes.
Applications in PDF format will be considered until the position has been filled. For
full consideration please submit applications by 30.09.2013. Please send applications to:
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Stefan Kopp
Sociable Agents Group, Faculty of Technology
Email:
stefan.kopp@uni-bielefeld.de
Prof. Dr. Jan De Ruiter
Psycholinguistics, Faculty of Linguistics & Literary Studies
Email:
jan.deruiter@uni-bielefeld.de
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PhD Title: Birdsong Forensics for Species Identification and Separation
Studentship: Full Scholarship, including fees (EU/Non EU) plus annual stipend of €16,000.
Start Date: Sept 2
nd, 2013
PhD Supervisor: Dr. Naomi Harte, Sigmedia Group, Electronic & Electrical Engineering, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Collaborator: Dr. Nicola Marples, Zoology, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Background:
The analysis of birdsong has increased in the speech processing community in the past 5 years. Much of the reported research has concentrated on the identification of bird species from their songs or calls. Smartphone apps have been developed that claim to automatically identify a bird species from a live recording taken by the user. A lesser reported topic is the analysis of birdsongs from subspecies of the
same bird. Among experts, bird song is considered a particularly effective way of comparing birds at species level. Differences in song may help uncover cryptic species. In many species, such as those living in the high canopy, catching the birds in order to obtain morphological (e.g. weight, bill length, wing length etc.) and genetic data may be time consuming and expensive. Identifying potentially interesting populations by the detection of song differences, allows any such effort to be better targeted.
Birdsong presents many unique challenges as a signal. The use of signal processing and machine learning techniques for birdsong analysis is at a very early stage within the ornithological research community. This PhD project seeks to lead the way in defining the state of the art for forensic birdsong analysis. Comparing birdsongs will push out the boundaries of feature analysis and classification techniques in signal processing. The research will develop new algorithms to systematically quantify levels of similarity in birdsong, transforming the comparison of birdsong in the natural sciences arena. The results will be of importance internationally for the study, monitoring, and conservation of bird populations.
Requirements:
The ideal candidate for this position will:
Have a primary degree (first class honours) in Electronic Engineering, Electronic and Computer Engineering or a closely related discipline.
Possess strong written and oral communication skills in English.
Have a strong background and interest in digital signal processing (DSP)
Be mathematically minded, and be curious about nature.
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UNIVERSITY OF EASTERN FINLAND: POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN SPEECH TECHNOLOGY
The Speech and Image Processing Unit (SIPU) research group (
http://www.uef.fi/fi/sipu) at the School of Computing (http://www.uef.fi/cs) announces POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER IN SPEECH
POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN SPEECH TECHNOLOGY
The position is filled in Academy of Finland project '
Reliable speaker recognition and modification', with focus on text-independent speaker recognition, but including also voice conversion and anti-spoofing topics. The post-doc will focus on core research in one of these technologies together with a speech processing group consisting of project leader, another postdoc and several PhD students. In addition to core research activities, the postdoc is expected to take part (10% to 15% of time) in practical supervision tasks of PhD/MSc students working on similar topics. There are no class-room teaching duties.
University of Eastern Finland (UEF) is a multidisciplinary university formed as a union of universities of Joensuu and Kuopio in 2010. UEF ranks among the best 100 universities in Times Higher Education evaluation of universities less than 50 years old (http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/world-university-rankings/2013/one-hundred-under-fifty). The postdoc position is filled up in Joensuu campus. School of Computing is located at the facilities of Joensuu Science Park, providing modern research facilities.
The candidate should have a doctoral degree in spoken language technology, electrical engineering, computer science, pattern recognition or a closely related field. The candidate should be comfortable with Unix/Linux tools and Matlab/Octave with good skills in signal processing or pattern recognition. Previous exposure to technology benchmarks (e.g. NIST evaluations, Blizzard challenge) is a plus.
The position is filled for a period of 1 to 2 years, with preference for the 2-year post. The salary will be placed on level 5 according to Finnish university salary system. In addition, the appointees will be paid a salary component based on their personal performance, which can be a maximum of 46.3 per cent of the job requirement component. Additionally, at least one conference trip per year is supported.
The application consisting of the following documents should be sent or delivered to the Registry Office of the University of Eastern Finland. Postal address: Itä-Suomen yliopisto, Kirjaamo, PL 111, 80101 Joensuu or Itä-Suomen yliopisto, Kirjaamo, PL 1627, 70211 Kuopio. Street address: Yliopistokatu 2 (Joensuu) and Yliopistonranta 1 E (Kuopio). The deadline for applications is
September 30, 2013 (at 3.00 pm Finnish time). The applications with verification of document originality (signatures) can also be sent as scanned PDF files to kirjaamo@uef.fi.
The application should include:
A cover letter indicating the position to be applied for and a free-worded application describing the special qualities of the applicant and his or her reasons for applying to the position
Full curriculum vitae (CV), including a list of publications (if any)
Copies of relevant diplomas and transcripts of academic records. The diplomas should be in English or Finnish, and the grading system should be described.
The names and contact information of at least two referees.
All enquiries related to the positions should be addressed to Dr. Tomi Kinnunen, email: tkinnu@cs.uef.fi, tomi.kinnunen@uef.fi, Tel. +358 50 442 2647.
www:
http://cs.joensuu.fi/pages/tkinnu/webpage/
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Emerson College
Post Doctoral Research Associate
Post Doctoral Research Associate in Autism
The Facial Affective and Communicative Expression (FACE) Lab at Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts announces the availability of a Postdoctoral Research Associate position, funded by the National Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders (NIH-NIDCD). The position is for two years, renewable up to four years.
The FACE lab investigates social communication, specifically facial and vocal expressions of children with and without autism, using several methodologies. We collect and analyze acoustic measures of speech, infrared motion capture data of facial feature movement, eyetracking data on gaze behavior to social stimuli, and subjective measures of how typical individuals perceive the facial and vocal expressions of individuals with high-functioning autism. The FACE lab is affiliated with the department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, which has active research programs in the study of communication and communication disorders in several different populations.
Emerson College is located in the center of Boston, surrounded by major health care and research centers, which provide a wide range of collaborative clinical and research opportunities. It is the nation’s only four year institution dedicated exclusively to communication and the arts. The program in Communication Sciences & Disorders is one of the oldest and most respected in the country, and is highly ranked among the most competitive graduate programs in communication disorders in the US. The department offers state-of the-art research facilities, on-campus clinical facilities and is easily reached by public transportation.
Campus Location
Boston Campus
Primary Duties, Responsibilites, and Tasks
The position involves interacting with children with and without autism and their families, recruiting participants and coordinating research activities in the lab, collecting and analyzing eyetracking, speechacoustic, motion-capture, and behavioral data, and disseminating research results through conferences and journal publications. The successful candidate is expected to develop and implement independent projects as well.
Required Knowledge, Skills, and Education (including hardware, software, and equipment)
Applicants should have a doctorate in speech and hearing sciences, linguistics, computer science, engineering, or a related field. Familiarity with autism, computer programming, and strong writing skills are required.
Required Prior Work Experience
Doctoral level research experience in autism or related field is also required.
Special Instructions to Applicants
Interested candidates should submit a cover letter describing their research interests and relevant experience, Curriculum Vitae, and contact information for three references to Dr. Ruth Grossman at ruth_grossman@emerson.edu.
Diversity Statement
Emerson College values and has placed an institutional priority on multiculturalism in the campus community. Through its constantly evolving curriculum it seeks to prepare students for success in an increasingly multicultural society. The successful candidate must have the ability to work effectively with faculty, students, and staff from diverse backgrounds. Members of historically underrepresented groups are encouraged to apply.
Open Date
09/02/2013
Open Until Filled
Yes
Job Title
English Language Learning (ELL) Faculty Member
Primary Duties, Responsibilities, and Tasks
Responsibilities
• Teach undergraduate- and graduate-level English writing, speaking, listening and reading to international students.
• Assess the level of student writing and oral skills.
• Work cooperatively with faculty members on pedagogies to address international student communication needs.
• Participate with the faculty in on-going curriculum review and development with an emphasis on ELL skills and their alignment with student needs and faculty requirements.
• Work with the Office of Admissions and the iGrad Transition program on assessing international student competencies.
• Work with the Office of Internationalization and Global Engagement to help articulate intercultural program development and research goals; facilitate the internationalization of the curriculum; and build additional support programs for international students.
• Work with the Lacerte Family Writing and Academic Resource Center (WARC) staff to develop strategies and programs to address international student communication needs.
Minimum Qualifications
• Three-to five years of experience teaching university level ELL courses.
• Expertise in ELL curricular development.
• Master’s Degree and TESL/TEFL/TESOL certification and/or degree.
• Fluency in a foreign language and experience living abroad.
• Strong work ethic, positive attitude (flexibility and optimism), and analytical/organizational skills.
• The ability to work independently as well as part of a team, multi-task, take initiative and set priorities to accomplish various instructional and operational tasks.
Emerson College is the nation’s only four-year institution dedicated exclusively to majors in communication and the arts in a liberal arts context. It is located in the theater district in the dynamic multi-cultural city of Boston in close proximity to major media outlets, arts institutions, and research centers. The college enrolls 3,662 undergraduate students and 830 graduate students from 75 countries and all 50 states.
jeid-5ed1a427fb5d2cb480e4cfa9c142be51
To apply, please visit: www.emerson.edu
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We are seeking a skilled postdoctoral fellow (PDF) whose expertise intersects automatic speech recognition (ASR) and neuroscience to develop a next-generation model of speech production.
Approximately 10% of North Americans have some sort of communication disorder. It is imperative that technology is used to mitigate difficulties these individuals have in being understood. This research involves building a model of how speech is produced physically and in the brain, and translating it directly into automatic speech recognition. Specifically, we propose to build an advanced neural network that relates words and phrases across electroencephalographic (EEG) data, acoustic data, and measurements of how the important articulators in speech (e.g., the lips and tongue) move. This model of speech production will be built from data recorded with people with cerebral palsy and healthy controls.
The PDF will work with a team of internationally recognized researchers in computer science, speech-language pathology, and neuroscience. Work will involve programming, data analysis, dissemination of results (e.g., papers and conferences), and partial supervision of graduate and undergraduate students. Some data collection will also be involved.
The successful applicant will have:
1) A doctoral degree in a relevant field of computer science, electrical engineering, biomedical engineering, neuroscience, or a relevant discipline;
2) Evidence of impact in research through a strong publication record in relevant venues;
3) Evidence of strong collaborative skills, including possibly supervision of junior researchers, students, or equivalent industrial experience;
4) Excellent interpersonal, written, and oral communication skills;
5) A strong technical background in machine learning, natural language processing, robotics, and human-computer interaction.
This work will be conducted at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute and the University of Toronto.
About the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
One of North America’s leading rehabilitation sciences centres, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute is revolutionizing rehabilitation by helping people overcome the challenges of disabling injury, illness or age related health conditions to live active, healthier, more independent lives. It integrates innovative patient care, ground-breaking research and diverse education to build healthier communities and advance the role of rehabilitation in the health system. Toronto Rehab, along with Toronto Western, Toronto General and Princess Margaret Hospitals, is a member of the University Health Network and affiliated with the University of Toronto.
Applicants should send 1) a full CV, 2) a representative sample of their work, and 3) a 1-page statement of purpose to Frank Rudzicz at frank@cs.toronto.edu by 1 December 2013.
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Voxygen SAS, a young and innovative company, is looking for an American
English language technician to work in one of its Text-to-Speech projects.
Voxygen develops speech synthesis products and services for World-wide
markets, with a particular focus on the creation of
expressive voices for industrial and entertainement purposes. For more
information on the company, please visit:
www.voxygen.fr
Job description:
- Validation of sentences correctness for script creation:
verification of orthography, grammar, readability and phonetic
transcription.
- Participate in the voice-talent casting.
- Assist company experts with native language expertise during script
recording sessions.
- Revision of automatic phonetization and segmentation of recorded script sentences.
Job Requirements:
- Fluent in spoken American English.
- Thorough knowledge of the language grammar and orthography.
- Keen ear for phonetic nuances.
- A degree in any language-related field such as linguistics, translation,
language teaching, will be helpful.
- Knowledge of the target language phonetics or previous experience with
TTS will be a definite plus.
- Attention to detail.
- Keen interest for language and technology.
This is a temporary position for 6 months. The job will be located in Brittany,
France (near Rennes or Lannion).
This is a great opportunity to participate in an exciting state-of-the-art
project and to colaborate with world-class experts in the field of TTS.
If this sounds interesting to you, please send us your CV to: jobs@voxygen.fr
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Post-doctoral position in Multimedia Indexing
Location: EURECOM, Multimedia Communications Department, Sophia Antipolis, France
Duration: 12 months
Description
We have an open position for a post-doc to work on several aspects of
Multimedia Indexing, in particular Multimedia fusion and co-training. We
are looking for candidates who are highly motivated to conduct high
quality research, propose and evaluate innovative solutions for the
difficult problems that arise when automatically analyzing Multimedia
content. This research is conducted in partnership with other French
laboratories and companies.
Candidates should have a PhD Degree (or equivalent) in Computer Science,
or a closely related area, with a good knowledge of Machine Learning
techniques, and possibly an experience on multimedia analysis. Good
programming skills are expected. A good level of written and spoken
English is mandatory.
Application
Screening of applications will begin immediately, and the search will
continue until the position is filled. Applicants should send, to the
email address below (i) a CV, (ii) a motivation letter, (iii) contact
details for three referees, (iv) a two page statement of research
interests and motivation.
Postal address :
EURECOM,
Campus SophiaTech,
450 route des Chappes,
06410 Sophia Antipolis,
France
Contact : Prof. Bernard Merialdo, Bernard.Merialdo@eurecom.fr
Web page : http://www.eurecom.fr/mm/
Phone number : +33 4 93 00 81 29
Fax number : +33 4 93 00 82 00
EURECOM is a French graduate school and a research center in
communication systems based in the international science park of Sophia
Antipolis, which brings together renowned universities such as Télécom
ParisTech, Aalto University (Helsinki), Politecnico di Torino,
Technische Universität München (TUM), Norwegian University of Science
and Technology (NTNU) and Vietnam National University Ho Chi Minh Ville
(VNU). The Principality of Monaco is a new institutional member. The
Institut Mines-Télécom is EURECOM’s founding member.
EURECOM benefits from a strong interaction with the industry through its
specific administrative structure: Economic Interest Group (kind of
consortium), which brings together international companies such as:
Swisscom, SFR, Orange, ST Microelectronics, BMW Group Research &
Technology, Symantec, Monaco Telecom, SAP, IABG. EURECOM deploys its
expertise around three major fields: Networking and security, Multimedia
Communications and Mobile Communications. EURECOM is particularly active
in research in its areas of excellence while also training a large
number of doctoral candidates. Its contractual research is recognized
across Europe and contributes largely to its budget.
Thanks to its strong ties set up with the industry, EURECOM was awarded
the “Institut Carnot” label jointly with the Institut Telecom right from
2006. The Carnot Label was designed to develop and professionalize
cooperative research. It encourages the realization of research projects
in public research centers that work together with socioeconomic actors,
especially companies.
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TWO Post‐Doc positions
in the Psycholinguistics research group at the University of Geneva (http://www.unige.ch/fapse/recherche/groupes/psycho/cognitive/langage.html) ,
to work on a project funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation:
- in the field of reading acquisition in children;
or
- in the field of language production in healhy and brain damaged (aphasic) speakers
Qualifications requested :
- PhD in psychology or neuroscience or related field
- Experience in the field of psycholinguistics and/or acquisition and/or neuropsychology of language
- Experience with EEG/ERP acquisition and analysis
Starting January 2014 or later.
Applicants should submit a CV and a mail with statement of research interests till October 31 to:
Marina.Laganaro@unige.ch or to Pascal.Zesiger@unige.ch
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Post-Doctoral Scholar: Computational Linguistics/Automated Speech Recognition
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Description:
Applications are invited for a full-time postdoctoral position in computational linguistics/automated speech recognition through the Department of English at Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff. This project will focus on extracting intonation features applicable to automated scoring systems and develop algorithms to measure the degree of nativeness of accented speech.This new position has guaranteed funding for two calendar years commencing on the date of appointment, with continued appointment upon availability of funds. Minimum Education: Ph.D. in Natural Language Processing, Electrical and Computer Engineering, or Computational Linguistics by the time of appointment, with an emphasis on speech technology. Required Qualifications
Preferred Qualifications
To Apply:
Candidates should email letter of application, CV, and names & contact information for 3 references to Dr. Okim Kang (okim.kang@nau.edu). For the complete job announcements, visit (Job ID#600539):https://hr.peoplesoft.nau.edu/psp/ph90prta/EMPLOYEE/HCM/c/HRS_HRAM.HRS_CE.GBL?Page=HRS_CE_HM_PRE&Action=A&SiteId=1
Deadlines: Open until further notice; review of applications will start on November 5, 2013.
Northern Arizona University (NAU) is a 25,000-student institution with its main campus is in Flagstaff, a four-season community of about 62,000 at the base of the majestic San Francisco Peaks. NAU is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, and applications from minority and women candidates are especially welcome. The position is open to non-US citizens or non-permanent residents. |
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Tenure-track Faculty Position in Human-Computer Interaction Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech The Department of Computer Science at Virginia Tech (www.cs.vt.edu) invites applications for a
full-time tenure-track position, at the rank of Assistant Professor, from candidates with expertise
in human-computer interaction (HCI). The department is especially interested in sub-areas of
HCI involving human interaction with big data or advanced technologies, such as large-scale data
visualization and human-robot interaction, but candidates from all areas of HCI are encouraged
to apply. Candidates should have a PhD in Computer Science or related discipline at the time of
appointment; a strong record of scholarship in human-computer interaction and interdisciplinary
areas; demonstrated ability to contribute to teaching at the undergraduate and graduate levels in
HCI and related subjects; sensitivity to issues of diversity in the campus community; and the
skills to establish and grow a multidisciplinary research group. Selected candidates are expected
to travel occasionally to attend professional conferences/meetings. VT CS faculty have been involved in HCI research since the early days of the field, and lead the
interdisciplinary Center for Human-Computer Interaction (hci.vt.edu), a university-wide effort
that brings together faculty with strengths in multi-sensory interactive communication, ecologies
of displays and devices, social/collaborative computing, and human aspects of
data/information/knowledge. Within CS, there are rich opportunities for collaboration in data
mining/machine learning, parallel and distributed computing, computational biology and
bioinformatics, information retrieval, software engineering, cyber security, cyber arts, and CS
education. Beyond the department, HCI faculty members collaborate with researchers in design
and the arts (the Institute for Creativity, Arts, and Technology), in engineering and science (the
Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Science), and in education, business, and liberal arts.
The Department of Computer Science has 36 research oriented tenure-track faculty and 11
research faculty. There are a total 12 NSF/DOE CAREER award winners in the department.
Research expenditures during FY2013 were $11.7 million; total research funding at the beginning
of FY2014 was $34 million. BS, MS, and PhD degrees are offered, with an enrollment of over
550 undergraduate majors (12% women) and over 200 PhD/MS students. In 2010, CS@VT was
ranked 5th in the country in recruiting quality of CS undergrads by the Wall Street Journal. The
department is in the College of Engineering, whose undergraduate program was ranked 6th and
graduate program was ranked 12th among public engineering schools in 2013 by US News and
World Report. Other research centers associated with the department include the new
interdisciplinary Discovery Analytics Center (dac.cs.vt.edu), which focuses on ‘big data’ problems
in areas of national interest including intelligence analysis, sustainability and health informatics,
and the Center for High End Computing Systemswww.checs.eng.vt.edu known for its expertise
in high performance computing, including energy efficient and/or heterogeneous supercomputers. Recently, we designed and acquired HokieSpeed, a CPU/GPU 200+ node machine for use by computational scientists and engineers across campus through a $2M NSF MRI grant. HokieSpeed ranked 11th in the world on the Green 500 List in November 2011. CS faculty also participate in the Ted and Karyn Hume Center for National Security and Technology (www.hume.ictas.vt.edu), a cyber security center. Virginia Tech is a comprehensive research university with over 31,000 students. This hire is for
the main campus in Blacksburg, consistently ranked among the country’s best places to live www.hr.vt.edu/great-place-to-work/culture-community. Salary for suitably qualified applicants is competitive and commensurate with experience.
Selected candidates must pass a criminal background check prior to employment. Applications must be submitted online to https://jobs.vt.edu for posting #117036. We welcome
applications from women and minorities. Applicant screening will begin December 15, 2013 and
continue until the position is filled. Early applications are encouraged. Inquiries should be directed
to Dr. Doug Bowman, HCI Search Committee Chair, bowman@vt.edu. Virginia Tech is an equal opportunity/affirmative action institution.
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Primary Location: United States-California-San Francisco Bay Area - Foster City
Description:
Sony PlayStation
® US R&D is looking for an individual who will contribute to voice recognition system and technologies for current and future Sony PlayStation® platforms. The Senior Software Engineer (voice recognition) for the R&D team will contribute to one or more of the following fields:
Automatic generation of pronunciation and voice recognition grammar for 10+ languages.
Language modeling (LM) for large vocabulary continuous speech recognition (LVCSR)
Robust automatic speech recognition (ASR) technologies to various kinds of distortions and variations such as channel and environment distortions, emotional speech, variety of speaking rate and speaking style for multiple languages.
Acoustic model training and adaptation.
Keyword spotting and voice search technologies are plus.
Speech synthesis experience is a plus.
Improve runtime voice recognition and sample voice applications on PS3 and PlayStation future platforms for many languages.
Qualifications:
At least 5 years’ experience and solid understanding in voice recognition and digital signal processing technologies.
At least 5 years’ experience and strong skills in scripting languages and C/C++ programming.
Experience of multi-lingual speech and language processing is preferred.
Good written and oral communication skills.
Bachelor's degree in Computer Science/Electrical Engineering, related engineering discipline, or equivalent
Master's degree or PhD in Computer Science/Electrical Engineering or equivalent is preferred
Fresh yet outstanding PhD graduates are also encouraged to apply.
To apply send email to 'AAGroup@playstation.sony.com' Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA) is home to the PlayStation® family of products, including the PlayStation®3 (PS3™, PlayStation® Vita (PS Vita), PlayStation® Mobile and PlayStation®Network. Founded in 1994, SCEA has grown into a leading global computer entertainment brand and continues to redefine interactive consumer entertainment. Since the original PlayStation® first revolutionized the world of gaming, SCEA has repeatedly set the benchmark for innovation in home and portable entertainment through amazing gameplay experiences that inspire people across the world. Based in Foster City, CA, SCEA serves as headquarters for all North American operations and employs over 2,104 people in offices located in Foster City, CA, San Diego, CA, Santa Monica, CA and Bend, OR. It is SCEA's policy to provide equal employment opportunity for all applicants and employees. SCEA does not unlawfully discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, gender identity, marital status, age, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, national origin, or any other category protected by applicable federal and state law. SCEA also makes reasonable accommodations for disabled applicants and employees.
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Dans le cadre du projet ANR ContNomina (2013-2016), nous proposons une thèse (36 mois), financée par ce projet sur le sujet suivant :
Exploitation du contexte pour la reconnaissance de noms propres dans les documents diachroniques
Début : novembre-décembre 2013 Lieu : Nancy LORIA/INRIA et LIA Avignon
Résumé : L'adaptation des systèmes de reconnaissance de la parole vise à rapprocher les modèles des conditions d'utilisations présumées ou observées : au locuteur, à l'environnement acoustique, au domaine, etc. Tandis que les adaptations acoustiques peuvent être réalisées de façon supervisée ou non-supervisées, sur des collections de données de tailles variables, les adaptations du modèle de langage requièrent des grandes quantités de données et sont appliquées dans la phase de conception du système.
Dans cette thèse, nous nous concentrerons sur la contextualisation des systèmes, opération qui consiste à réaliser une adaptation rapide et non supervisée des ressources linguistiques (lexique et modèle de langage) d'un reconnaisseur de parole. On traitera en particulier du problème de la reconnaissance des noms propres, pour lesquels une bonne couverture lexicale est très difficile à obtenir alors qu'ils participent significativement à l'intelligibilité du discours. Ce travail comporte deux parties qui concernent respectivement la modélisation des contextes et l'intégration de ces modèles dans un processus de reconnaissance multi-passes.
Liste des personnes à contacter : Irina Illina , Responsable du projet ANR ContNomina , INRIA-LORIA , Nancy , équipe Parole, tel 03 54 95 84 90, illina @ loria . fr Dominique Fohr , tel 03 83 50 20 27, fohr @ loria . fr
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Un poste d'ATER rattaché au département de sciences du langage et au laboratoire Parole et Langage à Aix-Marseille Université a été ouvert dans le cadre d'une campagne de recrutement au fil de l'eau.
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Position Title: Instructional Faculty
Faculty Rank: Assistant Professor
Faculty Type: Tenure Track
Department: English
PC# 8735 Requisition# 797BR
Anticipated Start Date:August 13, 2014
BRIEF JOB DESCRIPTION:
The Department of English at the Rochester Institute of Technology invites applications for an Assistant Professor of English tenure-track positionto begin August 13, 2014 with specialization in computational linguistics and/or innovative technical methods in language science, with a focus on one or more areas of application. Possible areas include:
Cultural or social analytics
Speech technology
Human-computer communication
Clinical, assistive, and/or access technology
Cognitive modeling of linguistic processes (for example reading)
Games and/or social media
The applicant should demonstrate a fit with our commitment to collaborate with colleagues across the university on curricular and research initiatives in digital humanities and language science.
DETAILED JOB DESCRIPTION:
The successful applicant will be a teacher and a researcher with an agenda that emphasizes innovative technical methods in linguistics, for instance natural language processing, corpus-based studies, linguistic/multimodal sensors, speech technology, and/or other computational approaches. We are seeking a scholar who engages in disciplinary and interdisciplinary teamwork and has a coherent plan for grant seeking activities. The right candidate will contribute to our department’s profile in the digital humanities, in addition to furthering our interdisciplinary language science curriculum in a college of liberal arts at a technical university. Contributions that build students’ global education experiences are additionally valued.
Teaching assignments may include Introduction to Language Science, Language Technology, Introduction to Natural Language Processing, Advanced Topics in Computational Linguistics, Language & Brain, self-designed courses, and other courses in the linguistics or general education frameworks such as Dialects & Identity, Text & Code, or Evolving English Language. The course teaching load is 3/2.
We are seeking an individual who has the ability and interest in contributing to a community committed to Student Centeredness; Professional Development and Scholarship; Integrity and Ethics; Respect, Diversity and Pluralism; Innovation and Flexibility; and Teamwork and Collaboration. Select to view links to RIT’s core values,honor code, and diversity commitment.
THE UNIVERSITY AND ROCHESTER COMMUNITY:
RIT is a national leader in professional and career-oriented education. Talented, ambitious, and creative students of all cultures and backgrounds from all 50 states and more than 100 countries have chosen to attend RIT. Founded in 1829, Rochester Institute of Technology is a privately endowed, coeducational university with nine colleges and institutes emphasizing career education and experiential learning. With approximately 15,000 undergraduates and 3,000 graduate students, RIT is one of the largest private universities in the nation. RIT offers a rich array of degree programs in engineering, science, business, and the arts, and is home to the National Technical Institute for the Deaf. RIT has been honored by The Chronicle of Higher Education as a “Great Colleges to Work For” for four years. RIT is responsive to the needs of dual career couples by our membership in the Upstate NY HERC.
Rochester, located on Lake Ontario, is the 79th largest city in the United States and the third largest city in New York State. The Greater Rochester region, which is home to nearly one million people, is rich in cultural and ethnic diversity, with a population comprised of approximately 16% African and Latin Americans and another 7% of international origin. It is also home to the largest deaf community per capita in the U.S. Rochester ranks 3rd best metropolitan regions for Raising a Family' by Forbes Magazine; 6th among 379 metropolitan areas as “Best Places to Live in America” by Places Rated Almanac; 1st in Expansion Management Magazine’s ranking of metropolitan areas having the best “Quality of Life in the Nation”; and is among Essence Magazine’s “Top 10 Cities for Black Families.”
REQUIRED MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
Ph.D. in Linguistics (or an allied field) in hand prior to appointment date
Advanced graduate coursework in language science and technical methods
Evidence of outstanding teaching
Experience teaching or mentoring diverse or multi-disciplinary students
Evidence of publication and a coherent plan for research and grant seeking activities
Ability to contribute in meaningful ways to the college’s continuing commitment to cultural diversity, pluralism, and individual differences.
HOW TO APPLY:
Apply online at http://careers.rit.edu/faculty. Search: 797BR. Please submit your cover letter; CV; copy of transcripts of graduate coursework; a research statement; a teaching statement; writing sample/portfolio; Contribution to Diversity Statement; and the names, addresses and phone numbers for three references.
CONTACT:
Please direct questions to Dr. Cecilia Ovesdotter Alm at: coagla@rit.edu or (585) 475-7327.
APPLICATION DEADLINE:
Review of applications on November 25, 2013.
RIT does not discriminate. RIT promotes and values diversity, pluralism and inclusion in the work place. RIT provides equal opportunity to all qualified individuals and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, age, marital status, sex, gender, religion, sexual orientations, gender identity, gender expression, national origin, veteran status or disability in its hiring, admissions, educational programs and activities.
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