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N4 NATO Native and Non-Native Speech

Item Name: N4 NATO Native and Non-Native Speech
Authors: John Grieco, Laurent Benarousse, Edouard Geoffrois, Robert Series, Herman Steeneken, Hans Stumpf, Carl Swail, and Dieter Thiel
LDC Catalog No.: LDC2006S13
ISBN: 1-58563-344-5
Release Date: Apr 17, 2006
Data Type: speech
Sample Rate: 16000 Hz
Sampling Format: pcm
Data Source(s): microphone speech
Application(s): cross-lingual information retrieval, sociolinguistics, speaker verification, speech recognition
Language(s): Dutch, English, German
Language ID(s): deu, eng, nld
Distribution: 1 DVD
Member fee: $0 for 2006 members
Non-member Fee: US$500.00
Reduced-License Fee: US$250.00
Extra-Copy Fee: US$200.00
Non-member License: yes
Member License: yes
Online documentation: yes
Licensing Instructions: Subscription Members, Standard Members, Non-Members
Citation: John Grieco, et al.
2006
N4 NATO Native and Non-Native Speech
Linguistic Data Consortium, Philadelphia

Introduction

This file contains documentation on the N4 NATO Native and Non-Native Speech Corpus, Linguistic Data Consortium (LDC) catalog number LDC2006S13 and ISBN 1-58563-344-5.

The N4 NATO Native and Non-Native Speech corpus was developed by the NATO research group on Speech and Language Technology in order to provide a military-oriented database for multilingual and non-native speech processing studies.

Speech data was recorded in the naval transmission training centers of four countries (Germany, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Canada). The material consists of native and non-native speakers speakers using NATO English procedure between ships and reading from a text, "The North Wind and the Sun," in both English and the speaker's native language.

Speech technology is covering an increasing number of languages, and systems are becoming more robust with regard to speech variablity such as speaking style and accents. However, for real applications, especially in a multilingual and multinational context, further robustness to regional and even non-native accents is necessary. Among numerous corpora available for speech research few have specifically addressed this issue.

The NATO Speech and Language Technology group decided to create a corpus geared towards the study of non-native accents. The group chose naval communications as the common task because it naturally includes a great deal of non-native speech and because there were training facilities where data could be collected in several countries.

Data

The database was collected in four countries (Germany, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Canada) during naval communication training sessions in 2000-2002. For each country, the main part of the recordings consists of a NATO Naval procedure in English where the typical sentence sounds like "This is alpha, whiskey, roger. I make two seven zero six hostile, two seven zero six. Out." In addition each speaker read a text, "The North Wind and the Sun," in English and his or her native language.

The audio material was recorded on DAT and downsampled to 16kHz-16bit, and all the audio files have been manually transcribed and annotated with speakers identities using the tool, Transcriber. Navy procedure recordings and text readings have been stored in different files. The first digit in the filename indicates the type of speech

Among speech segments, the duration of Navy procedure recordings range from 1.3h to 2.3h for a total of 7.5h. The duration of the native language text readings range from 1.5min to 22.9min for a total of around one hour.

CAGENLUKAll
Signal5.303.205.006.3019.80
Silence3.000.562.004.7010.26
Speech2.302.643.001.609.54
Speech2.302.643.001.609.54
Navy proc2.001.902.301.307.50
Read text0.300.740.700.302.04
Read text0.300.740.700.302.04
Non-native0.270.370.320.000.96
Native0.030.370.380.301.08

The database contains the following information about each speaker: gender, age, weight, length, possible speaking or hearing disorders, education level, living area, accent, second language, the year English was learned(for non-native speakers). The speaker accents vary widely from country to country. The speaker's average age was 22.6 years. Nineteen women participated, accounting for 18% of the study participants. There were a total of 115 speakers.

CAGENLUKAll
#Speakers22513111115
#Women509519
Age22-3517-2317-6119-6217-62
Age mean28.320.12127.522.6

Samples

For an example of the speech data in this corpus, please listen to this audio sample.

Content Copyright

Portions © 2006 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania


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