Climent Nadeu

Climent Nadeu received the Telecommunication Engineering degree in 1977 and the Doctoral degree in 1982, both from the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), Barcelona. Since 1977, he has been with the UPC, being Professor from 1991, and teaching in the signal processing area. During his sabbatical leaves, he has been a Visiting Researcher at AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ, at the International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley, CA, and at Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. He is author or coauthor of more than 150 publications in books, scientific journals, and conference proceedings, mainly in the area of speech technologies. He is cofounder of the Speech Processing Group of the UPC, and he was Director of the UPC’s Research Center for Technologies and Applications of Language and Speech (TALP) from its foundation in 1998 until March 2004. He has been involved in more than 50 research projects, leading a number of them; currently, he participates in the EU-funded integrated project Computers in the Human Interaction Loop (CHIL). He is Member of the Editorial Board of the journal Speech Communication, and Associated Editor of the Journal on Audio, Speech and Music Processing.

Biography Updated on 1 June 2007

Articles in Scholarly Journals [Incomplete List]

  1. Classification of acoustic events using SVM-based clustering schemes
    Pattern Recognition, vol. 39, no. 4, pp. 682–694, 2006
  2. Comparison and Combination of Features in a Hybrid HMM/MLP and a HMM/GMM Speech Recognition System
    IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 14–22, 2005
  3. Time and frequency filtering of filter-bank energies for robust HMM speech recognition
    Speech Communication, vol. 34, no. 1-2, pp. 93–114, 2001
  4. Linear prediction of the one-sided autocorrelation sequence for noisy speech recognition
    IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 80–84, 1997
  5. Filtering the time sequences of spectral parameters for speech recognition,
    Speech Communication, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 315–332, 1997
  6. Speech recognition in a noisy car environment based on LP of the one-sided autocorrelation sequence and robust similarity measuring techniques
    Speech Communication, vol. 21, no. 1-2, pp. 17–31, 1997
  7. Finite length cepstrum modelling — A simple spectrum estimation technique
    Signal Processing, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 49–59, 1992
  8. Maximum flatness spectral modeling
    IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, vol. 38, no. 11, pp. 2006–2008, 1990
  9. On the Cramer–Rao bound of finite-length cepstrum spectral estimators
    Electronics Letters, vol. 26, no. 14, p. 987, 1990
  10. A flatness-based generalized optimization approach to spectral estimation
    Signal Processing, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 311–320, 1990
  11. Spectral estimation with rational modeling of the log spectrum
    Signal Processing, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 7–18, 1986