Utterance verification using prosodic information for Mandarin telephone speech keyword spotting

In this paper, the prosodic information, a very special and important feature in Mandarin speech, is used for Mandarin telephone speech utterance verification. A two-stage strategy, with recognition followed by verification, is adopted. For keyword recognition, 59 context-independent subsyllables, i.e., 22 INITIALs and 37 FINALs in Mandarin speech, and one background/silence model, are used as the basic recognition units. For utterance verification, 12 anti-subsyllable HMMs, 175 context-dependent prosodic HMMs, and five anti-prosodic HMMs, are constructed. A keyword verification function combining phonetic-phase and prosodic-phase verification is investigated. Using a test set of 2400 conversational speech utterances from 20 speakers (12 males and 8 females), at 8.5% false rejection, the proposed verification method resulted in 17.8% false alarm rate. Furthermore, this method was able to correctly reject 90.4% of nonkeywords. Comparison with a baseline system without prosodic-phase verification shows that the prosodic information can benefit the verification performance.