I'm moving this to Speech Recognition forum, it's not directly related to Sphinx4
Online learning sounds cool, but most of the courses are too limited to give you a deep understanding of the subject. With your M.Sc background I'd recommend you to read one of the recent and not so recent books instead. References under your link are good:
Just echo Nick...... It depends how deep you want to go. If you are just interested in how speech recognition can be used. CMUSphinx, HTK, Kaldi's documentation would give you much ideas to digest.
If you want to go very in-depth. On-line may not be enough, I found books such as Rabiner's "Fundamentals" and Hwang's "Spoken Language Processing" the best in town. They are dense books but you would get some genuine understanding from them.
Arthur
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
I wonder if there are recommended resources for online learning on the topic?
For instance, any opinions on the following?
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-345-automatic-speech-recognition-spring-2003/index.htm
(I have M.Sc in Computer Science as backround).
Also see http://asr.cs.cmu.edu/
Last edit: Nickolay V. Shmyrev 2013-02-05
I'm moving this to Speech Recognition forum, it's not directly related to Sphinx4
Online learning sounds cool, but most of the courses are too limited to give you a deep understanding of the subject. With your M.Sc background I'd recommend you to read one of the recent and not so recent books instead. References under your link are good:
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-345-automatic-speech-recognition-spring-2003/syllabus/
Just echo Nick...... It depends how deep you want to go. If you are just interested in how speech recognition can be used. CMUSphinx, HTK, Kaldi's documentation would give you much ideas to digest.
If you want to go very in-depth. On-line may not be enough, I found books such as Rabiner's "Fundamentals" and Hwang's "Spoken Language Processing" the best in town. They are dense books but you would get some genuine understanding from them.
Arthur