Alex Waibel
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
719 Papers
9.9K Citations
Alex Waibel is an academic researcher from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Machine translation & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 690 publications. Previous affiliations of Alex Waibel include Carnegie Mellon University & University of Pittsburgh.
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Papers
•Proceedings Article
Performance Through Consistency: MS-TDNN's for Large Vocabulary Continuous Speech Recognition
Joe Tebelskis,Alex Waibel +1 more
- 30 Nov 1992
TL;DR: The architecture of the Multi-State Time Delay Neural Network is applied to large vocabulary continuous speech recognition, and it is demonstrated that the MS-TDNN outperforms all other systems that have been tested on the CMU Conference Registration database.
The 2012 KIT and KIT-NAIST English ASR Systems for the IWSLT Evaluation
Christian Saam,Christian Mohr,Kevin Kilgour,Michael Heck,Matthias Sperber,Keigo Kubo,Sebastian Stüker,Sakriani Sakti,Graham Neubig,Tomoki Toda,Satoshi Nakamura,Alex Waibel +11 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: This paper describes the English Speech-to-Text (STT) systems for the 2012 IWSLT TED ASR track evaluation, which consist of 10 subsystems that are combinations of different front-ends, e.g. MVDR based and MFCC based ones, and two different phone sets.
•Proceedings Article
Document Driven Machine Translation Enhanced Automatic Speech Recognition
Matthias Paulik,Christian Fügen,Thomas Schaaf,Tanja Schultz,Sebastian Stüker,Alex Waibel +5 more
- 01 Jan 2005
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Speech-to-Speech translation services for the olympic games 2008
Sebastian Stüker,Chengqing Zong,Jürgen Reichert,Wenjie Cao,Muntsin Kolss,Guodong Xie,Kay Peterson,Peng Ding,Victoria Arranz,Jian Yu,Alex Waibel +10 more
- 01 May 2006
TL;DR: The Digital Olympics Speech-to-Speech Translation System (SST) as mentioned in this paper addresses a general touristic domain with a special focus on pre-arrival hotel reservation, which allows rapid development of SST prototypes, the study of different user-interfaces and the on-the-fly comparison of alternative approaches to the individual problems involved in this task.
Stochastically-based semantic analysis for machine translation
TL;DR: The portability of a stochastic semantic analyser from a setting of human–machine interactions air travel information services and multimodal multimedia automated service kiosk into the more open one of human-to-human interactions (ESST) is investigated.
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