List of children's speech corpora

Summary

A child speech corpus is a speech corpus documenting first-language language acquisition. Such databases are used in the development of computer-assisted language learning systems and the characterization of children's speech at difference ages.[1] Children's speech varies not only by language, but also by region within a language. It can also be different for specific groups like autistic children, especially when emotion is considered. Thus different databases are needed for different populations. Corpora are available for American and British English as well as for many other European languages.[1][2][3]

Overview of Children's Speech Corpora edit

In the table below, the age range may be described in terms of school grades. "K" denotes "kindergarten" while "G" denotes "grade". For example, an age range of "K - G10" refers to speakers ranging from kindergarten age to grade 10.

This table is based on a paper from the Interspeech conference, 2016.[4] This online article is intended to provide an interactive table for readers and a place where information about children speech corpora that can be updated continuously by the speech research community.

Corpus Author Languages # Speakers # Utt. Duration Age Range Date Remarks
Boulder Learning—MyST Corpus (v0.4.0) [5] Cole et al.[6] English 1371 228,874 ~393h G3 - G5 2019 dialog interaction between a student and a virtual tutor on science topics; typically 20-40 minute (wall clock) duration of a session; roughly 49% of the utterances have been transcribed, and more being transcribed. volunteers encouraged. available free for research; flat $10K for commercial use.
CMU Kids Corpus [7] Eskenazi English 24M, 52F 5180 6 - 11 1997
CSLU Kids' Speech Corpus [8] Shobaki English 1100 1017 K - G10 2007
PF-STAR Children's Speech Corpus [9][10] Russell English, 158 ~14.5h 4 - 14 2006 word-level transcriptions
CALL-SLT [11] Rayner German 5000 2014
TBALL [12] Kazemgadeh English 256 5000 40h K - G4 2005 partially non-native speech
CASS_CHILD [13] Gao Mandarin 23 1 - 4 2012 phonetic transcriptions
CU Children's Read and Prompted Speech Corpus [14] Hagen English 663 ~100 K - G5 2001 consists of isolated words, sentences and short spontaneous story telling; word-level transcriptions
CU Story Corpus [14] Hagen English 106 5000 40h G3 - G5 2003 consists of story prompts and spontaneous spoken summary of the material; word-level transcriptions
Providence Corpus [15] Demuth English 6 363h 1 - 3 2006 mother-child spontaneous speech interactions; broad phonetic transcription
Lyon Corpus [16] Demuth French 4 185h 1 - 3 2007 mother-child spontaneous speech interactions; broad phonetic transcription
Demuth Sesotho Corpus [17] Demuth Sesotho 4 ~13250 98h 2 - 4 1992 family/peer spontaneous speech interactions; morphologically tagged
CHIEDE [18] Garrote Spanish 59 15444 ~8h 2008 spontaneous conversation, personal interviews, adult-child interaction; orthographic transcriptions; automatic phonological transcription
TIDIGITS [19] Leonard English 326 (101 children) 6 - 15 1993 mix of adult and child speakers
FAU Aibo Emotion Corpus Steidl German 51 9h 10 - 13 human-annotated with 11 emotion categories
Swedish NICE Corpus [20] Bell 5580 8 - 15 2005 consists of child-machine and adult-child interactions; orthographic transcriptions
SingaKids-Mandarin [4] Chen Mandarin 255 79,843 125h 7 - 12 2016 word and phone-level transcriptions; human-annotated proficiency ratings
CFSC[21] Pascual Filipino 57 ~8h 6-11 2012 consists of children's read speech; contains both good pronunciations and reading miscues; partially transcribed to word- and phoneme-levels

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Habernal, Ivan; Vaclav, Matousek (2013). Text, Speech, and Dialogue: 16th International Conference, TSD 2013, Pilsen, Czech Republic, September 1-5, 2013, Proceedings. Springer. p. 545. ISBN 9783642405853. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  2. ^ Neustein, Amy (2014). Speech and Automata in Health Care. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 225–226. ISBN 9781614515159. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  3. ^ Ronzhin, Andrey; Potapova, Rodmonga; Fakotakis, Nikos (2015). Speech and Computer: 17th International Conference, SPECOM 2015, Athens, Greece, September 20-24, 2015, Proceedings. Springer. pp. 144–145. ISBN 9783319231327. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  4. ^ a b Nancy F. Chen, Rong Tong, Darren Wee, Peixuan Lee, Bin Ma and Haizhou Li. SingaKids-Mandarin: Speech Corpus of Singaporean Children Speaking Mandarin Chinese, in Proc. of Interspeech, 2016.
  5. ^ "MyST Corpus | Boulder Learning inc". Retrieved 2019-07-17.
  6. ^ "My Science Tutor and the MyST Corpus". ResearchGate. Retrieved 2019-07-17.
  7. ^ Maxine Eskenazi, Jack Mostow, and David Graff. The CMU Kids Corpus LDC97S63. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 1997.
  8. ^ Khaldoun Shobaki, John-Paul Hosom, and Ronald Cole. CSLU: Kids' Speech Version 1.1 LDC2007S18. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 2007.
  9. ^ Martin Russell. The PF-STAR British English Children's Speech Corpus. The Speech Ark Limited. 2006.
  10. ^ Anton Batliner, Mats Blomberg, Shona D'Arcy, Daniel Elenius, Diego Giuliani, Matteo Gerosa, Christian Hacker, Martin Russell, Stefan Steidl, Michael Wong. The PF STAR Children’s Speech Corpus. In Proc. of Interspeech, 2005.
  11. ^ Manny Rayner, Nikos Tsourakis, Claudia Baur, Pierrette Bouillon, Johanna Gerlach. CALL-SLT: A Spoken CALL System based on grammar and speech recognition. In Linguistic Issues in Language Technology, vol. 10, issue 2. 2014.
  12. ^ Abe Kazemzadeh, Hong You, Markus Iseli, Barbara Jones, Xiaodong Cui, Margaret Heritage, Patti Price, Elaine Anderson, Shrikanth Narayanan and Abeer Alwan. TBALL Data Collection: The Making of a Young Children's Speech Corpus, in Proc. of Interspeech, 2005.
  13. ^ Jun Gao, Aijun Li and Ziyu Xiong. Mandarin Multimedia Child Speech Corpus: CASS_CHILD in International Conference on Speech Database and Assessments (Oriental COCOSDA), 2012.
  14. ^ a b Andreas Hagen, Bryan Pellom and Ronald Cole. Children's Speech Recognition with Application to Interactive Books and Tutors in IEEE Workshop on Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding, 2003.
  15. ^ Demuth, K., Culbertson, J. & Alter, J. 2006. Word-minimality, epenthesis, and coda licensing in the acquisition of English. Language & Speech, 49, 137-174.
  16. ^ Demuth, K. & A. Tremblay. 2007. Prosodically-conditioned variability in children's production of French determiners. Journal of Child Language, 34, 1-29.
  17. ^ Demuth, K. 1992. Acquisition of Sesotho. In D. Slobin (ed.), The Cross-Linguistic Study of Language Acquisition, vol 3, 557-638. Hillsdale, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
  18. ^ Marta Garrote. CHIEDE: A Spontaneous Child Language Corpus of Spanish. Ph.D. thesis, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain. 2008.
  19. ^ R. Gary Leonard, and George Doddington. TIDIGITS LDC93S10. Web Download. Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium, 1993.
  20. ^ Linda Bell, Johan Boyce, Joakim Gustafson, Mattias Heldner, Anders Lindström and Mats Wirén. The Swedish NICE Corpus - Spoken Dialogues between Children and Embodied Characters in a Computer Game Scenario, in Proc. of Eurospeech, 2005.
  21. ^ Pascual, R. M.; Guevara, R. C. L. (November 2012). "Developing a children's Filipino speech corpus for application in automatic detection of reading miscues and disfluencies". TENCON 2012 IEEE Region 10 Conference. pp. 1–6. doi:10.1109/TENCON.2012.6412235. ISBN 978-1-4673-4824-9. S2CID 8795591.