10th Speech in Noise Workshop, 11-12 January 2018, Glasgow

Registration

Anyone interested in "communication in imperfect conditions" is welcome to actively participate. In other words, our notion of "speech" is not limited to human communication, and also includes music; and our notion of "noise" is equally broad: it can be noise during transmission of a signal, or internal noise induced by impairments in the receiver (such as due to hearing deficits or limited computional resources in an automatic speech recognition system).

  • The registration fee is £60
  • And the conference dinner is £30

Abstract submission was open 20 September 2017 and closes 29 October 2017 but is now closed.
Registration is currently open, and closes 10 December 2017.

Posters

AO size, portrait or landscape orientation. Some folks have portrait templates, others have landscape templates. Can't we all just get along? Yes we can. Posters will be posted using adhesive putty ("tack") onto the walls of the Grand Hall. This has several advantages, but does have one disadvantage: the panels have grooves, so are not completely flat. This won't be a bother for anyone unless you bring some sort of heavy laminated leviathan. Also, no pins allowed.

About the SPIN workshop

The SpiN workshop is organized every year by a European research group within the speech and hearing community, and consists of two days of talks by invited speakers (PhD students, postdocs, and principal investigators, as well as a keynote lecture) and contributed poster presentations. The aim of the meeting is to bring together young investigators and senior faculty from several European hearing-research groups to stimulate networking, discussion of research topics, and scientific collaboration in the field of speech and hearing research. The presented work is traditionally focused on speech-related topics, such as speech intelligibility and quality in adverse conditions, computational models of speech perception, speech production, speech synthesis, linguistic and cognitive aspects of speech communication, effects of hearing impairment on speech processing, etc.

Why a workshop on speech in noise?

Speech is probably the most used method of communication. It is fast, robust, open to interaction and can be used in highly adverse conditions. Besides the content of the message it contains additional information, such as the emotional state, size and sex of the speaker. But occasionally speech information is not transmitted properly due to interference by one or more other sources typically labeled as "noise".

Technological progress demands a better understanding of the processes involved in the perception of speech in noise. For example, mobile telecommunications makes people communicate under far more noisier conditions than the traditional landline. Contemporary hearing aids with wireless technologies allow the implementation of numerous digital signal processing strategies, creating novel opportunities to improve the speech perception for hearing impaired listeners. A better understanding of the perception of speech in noise also appears imperative to a further development of cochlear implants. And notwithstanding progress in the field of automatic speech recognition, robustness to noise remains a challenge.

Besides challenges, new technology also created new opportunities to study the perception of speech in noise. Computational models in the field of room and space acoustics make it possible to evaluate listening conditions prior to construction or acoustic modifications. New techniques in brain imaging, neural processing and cognitive functioning allow new perspectives on the processing of noisy speech. Although speech intelligibility has traditionally received much interest, the presence of noise appears to influence subsequent processing by the human brain, even when the message appears to have been transmitted properly.

Speech in noise is thus a topic of interest for researchers from a wide variety of fields that are themselves often multidisciplinary. The SPIN workshop presents a unique opportunity for these researchers to meet and exchange on this topic with colleagues they would probably not meet in the main conference of their field.

Previous editions

Organisation committee 2018

The local organisers are members of the MRC Institute of Hearing Research:

  • William Witty Whitmer
  • Antje Menschy Heinrich
  • Etienne Goofy Gaudrain

To contact the organisers: .

Last modified 2017-12-04 09:55:35