Abstract
Despite recent advances in automatic speech recognition, one of the main stumbling blocks to the widespread adoption of Spoken Dialogue Systems is the lack of reliability of automatic speech recognizers. In this paper, we offer a two-tier error-correction process that harnesses syntactic, semantic and pragmatic information to improve the understanding of spoken referring expressions, specifically descriptions of objects in physical spaces. A syntactic-semantic tier offers generic corrections to perceived ASR errors on the basis of syntactic expectations of a semantic model, and passes the corrected texts to a language understanding system. The output of this system, which consists of pragmatic interpretations, is then refined by a contextual-phonetic tier, which prefers interpretations that are phonetically similar to the mis-heard words. Our results, obtained on a corpus of 341 referring expressions, show that syntactic-semantic error correction significantly improves interpretation performance, and contextual-phonetic refinements yield further improvements.
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