Speech interface reformulations and voice assistant personification preferences of children and parents.
Ye YuanStryker ThompsonKathleen WatsonAlice ChaseAshwin SenthilkumarA. J. Bernheim BrushSvetlana YaroshPublished in: Int. J. Child Comput. Interact. (2019)
Keyphrases
- hearing impaired
- text to speech
- interface design
- emotion recognition
- speech recognition
- voice activity detection
- hands free
- speech recognition errors
- speech synthesis
- autistic children
- speech quality
- fundamental frequency
- user interface
- speech recognition technology
- test bed
- speech sounds
- pilot study
- tangible user interface
- decision making
- parent child
- speech signal
- school children
- prosodic features
- synthesized speech
- text input
- user preferences
- preference elicitation
- audio visual
- user friendly
- text to speech synthesis
- non stationary
- young children
- vocal tract
- noisy environments
- preference relations
- automatic speech recognition
- multi attribute
- educational games
- qualitative preferences
- input device