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TIMIT

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TIMIT is a corpus of phonemically and lexically transcribed speech of American English speakers of different sexes and dialects. Each transcribed element has been delineated in time.

TIMIT was designed to further acoustic-phonetic knowledge and automatic speech recognition systems. It was commissioned by DARPA and corpus design was a joint effort between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, SRI International, and Texas Instruments (TI). The speech was recorded at TI, transcribed at MIT, and verified and prepared for publishing by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).[1] There is also a telephone bandwidth version called NTIMIT (Network TIMIT).

TIMIT and NTIMIT are not freely available — either membership of the Linguistic Data Consortium, or a monetary payment, is required for access to the dataset.

History

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The TIMIT telephone corpus was an early attempt to create a database with speech samples.[2] It was published in the year 1988 on CD-ROM and consists of only 10 sentences per speaker. Two 'dialect' sentences were read by each speaker, as well as another 8 sentences selected from a larger set [3] Each sentence averages 3 seconds long and is spoken by 630 different speakers.[4] It was the first notable attempt in creating and distributing a speech corpus and the overall project has produced costs of 1.5 million US$.[5]

The full name of the project is DARPA-TIMIT Acoustic-Phonetic Continuous Speech Corpus[6] and the acronym TIMIT stands for Texas Instruments/Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The main reason why a corpus of telephone speech was created was to train speech recognition software. In the Blizzard challenge, different software has the obligation to convert audio recordings into textual data and the TIMIT corpus was used as a standardized baseline.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Fisher, William M.; Doddington, George R.; Goudie-Marshall, Kathleen M. (1986). "The DARPA Speech Recognition Research Database: Specifications and Status". Proceedings of DARPA Workshop on Speech Recognition. pp. 93–99.
  2. ^ Morales, Nicolas and Tejedor, Javier and Garrido, Javier and Colas, Jose and Toledano, Doroteo T (2008). "STC-TIMIT Generation of a single-channel telephone corpus". Proceedings of the Sixth International Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'08): 391–395.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Lori F Lamel and Robert H. Kassel and Stephanie Seneff (1986). Speech Database Development: Design and Analysis of the Acoustic-Phonetic Corpus (Technical report). DARPA (SAIC-86/1546).
  4. ^ John S Garofolo and Lori F Lamel and William M Fisher and Jonathan G Fiscus and David S Pallett and Nancy L Dahlgren (1993). DARPA TIMIT (Technical report). National Institute of Standards and Technology. doi:10.6028/nist.ir.4930.
  5. ^ Nattanun Chanchaochai and Christopher Cieri and Japhet Debrah and Hongwei Ding and Yue Jiang and Sishi Liao and Mark Liberman and Jonathan Wright and Jiahong Yuan and Juhong Zhan and Yuqing Zhan (2018). GlobalTIMIT: Acoustic-Phonetic Datasets for the World's Languages. Interspeech 2018. ISCA. doi:10.21437/interspeech.2018-1185.
  6. ^ Bauer, Patrick and Scheler, David and Fingscheidt, Tim (2010). WTIMIT: The TIMIT Speech Corpus Transmitted Over The 3G AMR Wideband Mobile Network. LREC.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Sawada, Kei and Asai, Chiaki and Hashimoto, Kei and Oura, Keiichiro and Tokuda, Keiichi (2016). The NITech text-to-speech system for the Blizzard Challenge 2016. Blizzard Challenge 2016 Workshop.{{cite conference}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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