tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8496373585700416995.post1847407590894404054..comments2023-06-18T20:13:49.867+08:00Comments on Dream & Passion: cmusphinx3 phoneme alignmentAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09375125981129389911noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8496373585700416995.post-52561939920059891672013-08-05T09:10:04.809+08:002013-08-05T09:10:04.809+08:00Does the cepstrum, as well as feat (not sure what ...Does the cepstrum, as well as feat (not sure what feat means), need to computed in advance?graphicsRathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11719283384163747118noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8496373585700416995.post-3792434778594134282012-07-18T04:26:32.321+08:002012-07-18T04:26:32.321+08:00Hi, I managed to perform a one pass phone alignmen...Hi, I managed to perform a one pass phone alignment using -phsegdir instead of -phlabdir (or adding it) in the first pass of your tutorial.<br />The output in the segmentation dir is a file with the same name as the original one but a .phseg extension.<br /><br />It looks like this:<br /> SFrm EFrm SegAScr Phone<br /> 0 2 -50469 SIL<br /> 3 9 -55412 W SIL IY b<br /> 10 15 -44970 IY W W e<br />...<br /><br />The first phone is the one you're aligning, the second and third are the previous and posterior phone, respectively, and the last letter indicates if the phone is at the beginning (b), end (e) or into (i) a word.<br /><br />I didn't solve it actually. Alejandro, a researcher of my group, passed me the tip. <br /><br />~MiguelMigueliohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05420039693231985139noreply@blogger.com