- Source: Pronunciation assessment
Automatic pronunciation assessment is the use of speech recognition to verify the correctness of pronounced speech, as distinguished from manual assessment by an instructor or proctor. Also called speech verification, pronunciation evaluation, and pronunciation scoring, the main application of this technology is computer-aided pronunciation teaching (CAPT) when combined with computer-aided instruction for computer-assisted language learning (CALL), speech remediation, or accent reduction.
Pronunciation assessment does not determine unknown speech (as in dictation or automatic transcription) but instead, knowing the expected word(s) in advance, it attempts to verify the correctness of the learner's pronunciation and ideally their intelligibility to listeners, sometimes along with often inconsequential prosody such as intonation, pitch, tempo, rhythm, and syllable and word stress. Pronunciation assessment is also used in reading tutoring, for example in products such as Microsoft Teams and from Amira Learning. Automatic pronunciation assessment can also be used to help diagnose and treat speech disorders such as apraxia.
Intelligibility
The earliest work on pronunciation assessment avoided measuring genuine listener intelligibility, a shortcoming corrected in 2011 at the Toyohashi University of Technology, and included in the Versant high-stakes English fluency assessment from Pearson and mobile apps from 17zuoye Education & Technology, but still missing in 2023 products from Google Search, Microsoft, Educational Testing Service, Speechace, and ELSA. Assessing authentic listener intelligibility is essential for avoiding inaccuracies from accent bias, especially in high-stakes assessments; from words with multiple correct pronunciations; and from phoneme coding errors in machine-readable pronunciation dictionaries. In the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) assessment criteria for "overall phonological control", intelligibility outweighs formally correct pronunciation at all levels.
In 2022, researchers found that some newer speech to text systems, based on end-to-end reinforcement learning to map audio signals directly into words, produce word and phrase confidence scores closely correlated with genuine listener intelligibility. In 2023, others were able to assess intelligibility using dynamic time warping based distance from Wav2Vec2 representation of good speech.
Evaluation
Although there are as yet no industry-standard benchmarks for evaluating pronunciation assessment accuracy, researchers occasionally release evaluation speech corpuses for others to use for improving assessment quality. Such evaluation databases often emphasize formally unaccented pronunciation to the exclusion of genuine intelligibility evident from blinded listener transcriptions.
Recent developments
Some promising areas for improvement being developed in 2024 include articulatory feature extraction and transfer learning to suppress unnecessary corrections. Other interesting advances under development include "augmented reality" interfaces for mobile devices using optical character recognition to provide pronunciation training on text found in user environments. As of mid-2024, audio multimodal large language models have been used to assess pronunciation.
See also
Phonetics
Speech segmentation — often called "forced alignment" (of audio to its expected phonemes) in this context
Statistical classification
References
External links
International Speech Communication Association (ISCA) Special Interest Group on Speech and Language Technologies in Education (SLaTE)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Beijing
- Nauru
- Pedagogi bahasa
- Vyacheslav Volodin
- Pronunciation assessment
- Pronunciation
- Speech recognition
- Hong Kong English
- Non-native pronunciations of English
- SAMPA chart for English
- USMLE Step 2 Clinical Skills
- Cambridge Assessment English
- Luke Harding (linguist)
- J. R. R. Tolkien