Introduction
This file contains documentation on the Articulation Index, Linguistic
Data Consortium (LDC) catalog number LCD2005S22 and ISBN 1-58563-346-1.
The Articulation Index Corpus was partly inspired by the work of Harvey
Fletcher, who performed a number of perceptual experiments involving English
syllables during the first half of the 20th century. His term
"articulation index" meant something like "perceptual index of syllables,"
where those syllables were not necessarily words, and reflected how well
speakers could correctly identify syllables in the presence of noise. This
corpus was created to facilitate similar experiments, as well as to
potentially facilitate new methods in speech recognition research.
The basic concept behind the corpus is to record speakers pronouncing
syllables of English, some of which might be real words, but most of which
are nonsense syllables. The goal was to have each speaker say a set of
2,000 syllables common to all speakers, as well as a set of 20 syllables
unique to that speaker. This goal was nearly met, but not precisely; see
below for a description of the syllable inventory.
Samples
For an example of this corpus, please review this audio sample.
Content Copyright
© 2005 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania |