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Speech Communication, Volume 40
Volume 40, Numbers 1-2, April 2003
- Ellen Douglas-Cowie, Roddy Cowie, Nick Campbell:

Speech and Emotion. 1-3 - Roddy Cowie

, Randolph R. Cornelius:
Describing the emotional states that are expressed in speech. 5-32 - Ellen Douglas-Cowie, Nick Campbell, Roddy Cowie

, Peter Roach:
Emotional speech: Towards a new generation of databases. 33-60 - Kai Alter

, Erhard Rank, Sonja A. Kotz, Ulrike Toepel, Mireille Besson, Annett Schirmer
, Angela D. Friederici:
Affective encoding in the speech signal and in event-related brain potentials. 61-70 - Caroline Menezes, Bryan Pardo, Donna Erickson, Osamu Fujimura:

Changes in syllable magnitude and timing due to repeated correction. 71-85 - Véronique Aubergé, Marie-Agnès Cathiard:

Can we hear the prosody of smile? 87-97 - Marc Schröder:

Experimental study of affect bursts. 99-116 - Anton Batliner, K. Fischer, Richard Huber, Jörg Spilker, Elmar Nöth

:
How to find trouble in communication. 117-143 - Raul Fernandez, Rosalind W. Picard:

Modeling drivers' speech under stress. 145-159 - Akemi Iida, Nick Campbell, Fumito Higuchi, Michiaki Yasumura:

A corpus-based speech synthesis system with emotion. 161-187 - Christer Gobl

, Ailbhe Ní Chasaide:
The role of voice quality in communicating emotion, mood and attitude. 189-212 - Louis ten Bosch

:
Emotions, speech and the ASR framework. 213-225 - Klaus R. Scherer:

Vocal communication of emotion: A review of research paradigms. 227-256
Volume 40, Number 3, May 2003
- Abeer Alwan:

Editorial. 259-260 - Lamia Karray, Arnaud Martin:

Towards improving speech detection robustness for speech recognition in adverse conditions. 261-276 - Yusuke Hiwasaki, Kazunori Mano, Takao Kaneko:

An LPC vocoder based on phase-equalized pitch waveform. 277-290 - James J. Hant, Abeer Alwan:

A psychoacoustic-masking model to predict the perception of speech-like stimuli in noise. 291-313 - Michael Kiefte

:
Temporal information in gated stop consonants. 315-333 - Henk van den Heuvel, David van Kuijk, Lou Boves:

Modeling lexical stress in continuous speech recognition for Dutch. 335-350 - Jitendra Ajmera, Iain McCowan, Hervé Bourlard:

Speech/music segmentation using entropy and dynamism features in a HMM classification framework. 351-363 - Vijay Parsa, Donald G. Jamieson:

Interactions between speech coders and disordered speech. 365-385 - Ramón López-Cózar, Ángel de la Torre

, José C. Segura
, Antonio J. Rubio:
Assessment of dialogue systems by means of a new simulation technique. 387-407 - Victor N. Sorokin:

Some coding properties of speech. 409-423
Volume 40, Number 4, June 2003
- Elvira Mendoza, Gloria Carballo, A. Cruz, María Dolores Fresneda, Juana Muñoz, Victoria Marrero-Aguiar

:
Temporal variability in speech segments of Spanish: context and speaker related differences. 431-447 - Naren Malayath, Hynek Hermansky

:
Data-driven spectral basis functions for automatic speech recognition. 449-466 - James Emil Flege, Carlo Schirru, Ian R. A. MacKay:

Interaction between the native and second language phonetic subsystems. 467-491 - Robert S. Bolia, Raymond E. Slyh:

Perception of stress and speaking style for selected elements of the SUSAS database. 493-501 - Fabrice Malfrère, Olivier Deroo, Thierry Dutoit, Christophe Ris:

Phonetic alignment: speech synthesis-based vs. Viterbi-based. 503-515 - Judith M. Kessens, Catia Cucchiarini, Helmer Strik

:
A data-driven method for modeling pronunciation variation. 517-534 - Atsuhiro Sakurai, Keikichi Hirose, Nobuaki Minematsu:

Data-driven generation of F0 contours using a superpositional model. 535-549 - Richard M. Warren, James A. Bashford, Peter W. Lenz:

Intelligibility of dual rectangular speech bands: Implications of observations concerning amplitude mismatch and asynchrony. 551-558 - Noriko Suzuki

, Yugo Takeuchi, Kazuo Ishii, Michio Okada:
Effects of echoic mimicry using hummed sounds on human-computer interaction. 559-573 - Kathryn Hoberg Arehart, John H. L. Hansen, Stephen Gallant, Laura Kalstein:

Evaluation of an auditory masked threshold noise suppression algorithm in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. 575-592

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