The predictability of name pronunciation errors in four South African languages
Loading...
Date
Authors
Kgampe, Mpho
Davel, Marelie H.
Researcher ID
Supervisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Pattern Recognition Association of South Africa and Mechatronics International Conference
Record Identifier
Abstract
Personal names are often pronounced in very different ways depending on the language background of the speaker. We seek to determine whether some of these pronunciations 'errors' are systematic and if so, in which ways. Specifically, we analyze some of the typical errors made by speakers from four South African languages (Setswana, English, isiZulu) when producing names from the same four languages. We compare these results with the pronunciations generated by four language-specific grapheme-to-phoneme (G2P) predictors trained on generic words from the four languages. We find that the G2P predictors are able to predict at least some of the typical errors humans make and, in fact, that these errors are slightly more predictable than the correct pronunciations themselves.
Sustainable Development Goals
Description
Citation
Mpho Kgampe and Marelie H Davel, “The predictability of name pronunciation errors in four South African languages”, in Proc. Annual Symp. Pattern Recognition Association of South Africa (PRASA), pp 85-90, Vanderbijlpark, South Africa, 2011. [http://engineering.nwu.ac.za/multilingual-speech-technologies-must/publications]
