Stanford Adaptive Networks Colloquium
Mark Gluck
netlist at psych.Stanford.EDU
Thu Nov 17 20:06:02 EST 1988
Stanford University Interdisciplinary Colloquium Series:
Adaptive Networks and their Applications
Nov. 22nd (Tuesday, 3:15pm)
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Toward a model of speech acquisition: Supervised learning
and systems with excess degrees of freedom
MICHAEL JORDAN
E10-034C
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Massachussetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139
<jordan at psyche.mit.edu>
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Abstract
The acquisition of speech production is an interesting domain for
the development of connectionist learning methods. In this talk,
I will focus on a particular component of the speech learning problem,
namely, that of finding an inverse of the function that relates
articulatory events to perceptual events. A problem for the learning
of such an inverse is that the forward function is many-to-one and
nonlinear. That is, there are many possible target vectors corresponding
to each perceptual input, but the average target is not in general a solution.
I will argue that this problem is best resolved if targets are specified
implicitly with sets of constraints, rather than as particular vectors
(as in direct inverse system identification). Two classes of constraints
are distinguished---paradigmatic constraints, which implicitly specify
inverse images in articulatory space, and syntagmatic constraints, which
define relationships between outputs produced at different points in
time. (The latter include smoothness constraints on articulatory
representations, and distinctiveness constraints on perceptual
representations). I will discuss how the interactions between these
classes of constraints may account for two kinds of variability in
speech: coarticulation and historical change.
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Location: Room 380-380W, which can be reached through the lower level
between the Psychology and Mathematical Sciences buildings.
Technical Level: These talks will be technically oriented and are intended
for persons actively working in related areas. They are not intended
for the newcomer seeking general introductory material.
Information: To be added to the network mailing list, netmail to
netlist at psych.stanford.edu For additional information,
contact Mark Gluck (gluck at psych.stanford.edu).
Upcomming talks:
Dec. 6: Ralph Linsker (IBM)
Co-Sponsored by: Departments of Electrical Engineering (B. Widrow) and
Psychology (D. Rumelhart, M. Pavel, M. Gluck), Stanford Univ.
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