The first Text, Speech and Dialogue conference took place in Brno in 1998.
Overview
TSD series evolved as a prime forum for interaction between researchers in both spoken and written language processing from all over the world. Proceedings of TSD form a book published by Springer-Verlag in their Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI) series.[1]
TSD proceedings are regularly indexed by Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index. Moreover, LNAI series are listed in all major citation databases such as DBLP, SCOPUS, EI, INSPEC or COMPENDEX.[2]
Corpora and language resources (monolingual, multilingual, text and spoken corpora, large web corpora, disambiguation, specialized lexicons, dictionaries)
Speech recognition (multilingual, continuous, emotional speech, handicapped speaker, out-of-vocabulary words, alternative way of feature extraction, new models for acoustic and language modelling)
Tagging, classification and parsing of text and speech (morphological and syntactic analysis, synthesis and disambiguation, multilingual processing, sentiment analysis, credibility analysis, automatic text labeling, summarization, authorship attribution)
Speech and spoken language generation (multilingual, high fidelity speech synthesis, computer singing)
^Carroll, John A. (2010). "Parsing and Real-World Applications". In Sojka, Petr; Horák, Aleš; Kopeček, Ivan; Pala, Karel (eds.). Text, Speech and Dialogue: 13th International Conference, TSD 2010, Brno, Czech Republic, September 6-10, 2010. Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 6231. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-15760-8. ISBN978-3-642-15760-8.