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Department of Electrical Engineering - Columbia University SPEECH AND AUDIO PROCESSING AND RECOGNITIONELEN E6820 - Spring 2001News
General Information
OverviewAudio processing is a huge field, so this course will necessarily be eclectic rather than comprehensive. The first half of the course will cover fundamentals in signal processing, pattern recognition, acoustics and auditory perception. In the second half we will look at several application areas, the largest of which will be automatic speech recognition, with the goal of understanding all the components of a modern large-vocabulary continuous speech recognizer. We will also consider topics such as high-quality psychoacoustic-based compression schemes (exemplified by the ubiquitous 'MP3'), and various issues in content-based retrieval for audio data. ObjectivesThis course will give students a foundation in current audio and recognition technologies. One objective is to build up a familiarity with the perceptually-salient aspects of the audio signal, and how they can be extracted and manipulated through signal processing. A second related but separate objective is to obtain a thorough understanding of the statistical pattern recognition technology at the core of contemporary speech recognition systems. Thirdly, the course aims to deepen each student's familiarity with the practical application of signal processing in general, through the study of specific instances, and through the experience of the term project. PrerequisitesThe course assumes a familiarity with signals and systems. We will be working in the discrete-time domain, so a basic DSP course such as ELEN E4810 is most suitable. The material on pattern recognition assumes a basic familiarity with probability, including Bayes' theory. Grade structureThe course consists of lectures each week, weekly problem sets, midterm and final exams, and a term project. The grade will be broken down as follows:
HomeworkProblem sets will be announced on the problem sets page of this web site directly after each lecture. They will be due by the time of the following lecture, at which time the solutions will be posted on the website. Late problems sets will not be accepted. ProjectsFor details and suggestions, see the separate projects page. Course outlineSee the course outline page. Dan Ellis <[email protected]> Last updated: Wed Apr 25 18:33:22 EDT 2001 |