My SLT 2008 Schedule

Note: Your custom schedule will not be saved unless you create a new account or login to an existing account.

Clicking on the Add button next to a paper title will add that paper to your custom schedule.
Clicking on the Remove button next to a paper will remove that paper from your custom schedule.

Spoken Language Understanding

Session Type: Poster
Time: Tuesday, December 16, 11:30 - 13:00
Location: TBD
Chair:  ,
 
  Paper 1: HIERARCHICAL HMM-BASED SEMANTIC CONCEPT LABELING MODEL
         Kinfe Tadesse Mengistu; Otto-von-Guericke University
         Mirko Hannemann; Otto-von-Guericke University
         Tobias Baum; Otto-von-Guericke University
         Andreas Wendemuth; Otto-von-Guericke University
 
  Paper 2: JOINT GENERATIVE AND DISCRIMINATIVE MODELS FOR SPOKEN LANGUAGE UNDERSTANDING
         Marco Dinarelli; University of Trento
         Alessandro Moschitti; University of Trento
         Giuseppe Riccardi; University of Trento
 
  Paper 3: SEMANTIC ANNOTATIONS FOR CONVERSATIONAL SPEECH: FROM SPEECH TRANSCRIPTIONS TO PREDICATE ARGUMENT STRUCTURES
         Arianna Bisazza; University of Trento
         Marco Dinarelli; University of Trento
         Silvia Quarteroni; University of Trento
         Sara Tonelli; Fondazione Bruno Kessler
         Alessandro Moschitti; University of Trento
         Giuseppe Riccardi; University of Trento
 
  Paper 4: THE CALO MEETING SPEECH RECOGNITION AND UNDERSTANDING SYSTEM
         Gokhan Tur; SRI
         Andreas Stolcke; SRI
         Lynn Voss; SRI
         John Dowding; CSLI
         Benoit Favre; ICSI
         Raquel Fernandez; CSLI
         Matthew Frampton; CSLI
         Michael Frandsen; SRI
         Clint Frederickson; SRI
         Martin Graciarena; SRI
         Dilek Hakkani-Tür; ICSI
         Donald Kintzing; SRI
         Kyle Leveque; SRI
         Shane Mason; SRI
         John Niekrasz; CSLI
         Stanley Peters; CSLI
         Matthew Purver; CSLI
         Korbinian Riedhammer; ICSI
         Elizabeth Shriberg; SRI
         Jing Tien; SRI
         Dimitra Vergyri; SRI
         Fan Yang; SRI
 
  Paper 5: AUTOMATIC FRAMENET-BASED ANNOTATION OF CONVERSATIONAL SPEECH
         Bonaventura Coppola; University of Trento
         Alessandro Moschitti; University of Trento
         Sara Tonelli; University of Trento
         Giuseppe Riccardi; University of Trento
 
  Paper 6: EFFICIENT SENTENCE SEGMENTATION USING SYNTACTIC FEATURES
         Benoit Favre; International Computer Science Institute
         Dilek Hakkani-Tur; International Computer Science Institute
         Slav Petrov; University of California Berkeley
         Dan Klein; University of California Berkeley
 
  Paper 7: MODELING VOCAL INTERACTION FOR TEXT-INDEPENDENT DETECTION OF INVOLVEMENT HOTSPOTS IN MULTI-PARTY MEETINGS
         Kornel Laskowski; Carnegie Mellon University
 
  Paper 8: EXPERIMENTS IN SPEECH DRIVEN QUESTION ANSWERING
         César González-Ferreras; Universidad de Valladolid
         Valentín Cardeñoso-Payo; Universidad de Valladolid
         Emilio Sanchis-Arnal; Universidad Politécnica de Valencia
 
  Paper 9: AN ANALYSIS OF GRAMMATICAL ERRORS IN NON-NATIVE SPEECH IN ENGLISH
         John Lee; Massachusetts Institute of Technology
         Stephanie Seneff; Massachusetts Institute of Technology
 
  Paper 10: PDTSL: AN ANNOTATED RESOURCE FOR SPEECH RECONSTRUCTION
         Jan Hajic; Charles University in Prague
         Silvie Cinkova; Charles University in Prague
         Marie Mikulova; Charles University in Prague
         Petr Pajas; Charles University in Prague
         Jan Ptacek; Charles University in Prague
         Josef Toman; Charles University in Prague
         Zdenka Uresova; Charles University in Prague
 
  Paper 11: DISCRIMINATIVE LEARNING USING LINGUISTIC FEATURES TO RESCORE N-BEST SPEECH HYPOTHESES
         Maria Georgescul; University of Geneva
         Manny Rayner; University of Geneva
         Pierrette Bouillon; University of Geneva
         Nikos Tsourakis; University of Geneva
 
  Paper 12: AUTOMATIC LABELING OF CONTRASTIVE WORD PAIRS FROM SPONTANEOUS SPOKEN ENGLISH
         Leonardo Badino; University of Edinburgh
         Robert Clark; University of Edinburgh