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07/23/2012 | Press release
distributed by noodls on 07/23/2012 10:25
Victor Zue, the Delta Electronics Professor of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science at MIT and a principal
investigator at the Computer Science and Artificial
Intelligence Laboratory, has been named the recipient of the
IEEE
James L. Flanagan Speech and Audio Processing Award. Zue
was honored for his "pioneering contributions to
acoustic phonetics and conversational spoken-language
systems."
In the early part of his career, Zue conducted
research in acoustic phonetics and phonology, codifying the
acoustic manifestation of speech sounds and the phonological
rules governing the realization of pronunciation in American
English. Subsequently, his research interests shifted toward
the development of spoken language interfaces to make
human-computer interactions more natural. Between 1989 and
2001, he led the Spoken Language Systems Group at the MIT
Laboratory for Computer Science, which has pioneered the
development of many systems that enable a user to interact
with computers using spoken language.
Zue's current research interests are in the area of applying
human language technologies to enable easy access of
structured and unstructured information from the Web,
especially in application areas such as education and health
care.
The IEEE James L. Flanagan Speech and Audio Processing Award
was established in 2002 to recognize outstanding
contributions to the advancement of speech and/or audio
signal processing.