Florian Schiel

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Curriculum vitae:
FLORIAN SCHIEL received his Dipl.-Ing. and Dr.-Ing. degrees from the Technical University in Munich in 1990 and 1993 respectively, both in electrical engineering. His doctoral thesis deals with automatic speaker adaptation in ASR. Since 1993 he was mainly affiliated to the Institute of Phonetics, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich (LMU), leading the German VERBMOBIL, SmartKom, BITS and SmartWeb project groups. In 1994 and 1997 he spent 6 months each as a research fellow at the International Computer Science Institut (ICSI), Berkeley, California. In 2001 Florian Schiel earned the German 'Habilitation' about the relation of speech technology and phonology at the philosophical faculty of the LMU and since then holds the chair of Phonetic Speech Processing. From 1996 to 2010 he acted as founding director of the Bavarian Archive for Speech Signals (BAS) at the LMU München. In 2005 he founded the spinoff BAS Services Schiel in Munich, Germany. Currently he is CEO for BAS Services and is tenured as a senior researcher at the new Institut of Phonetics and Speech Processing at LMU.
In 2009 he initiated the 'Empirical Speech Processing' graduate school at LMU (together with Chr. Draxler). His present research interests include the analysis and modelling of user specific states based on large data sets, empirical speech analysis in general, speech corpus production and evaluation, speaker verification and forensic phonetics.
He is the author/co-author of 4 monographs, 10 journal articles and book chapters, 28 peer-reviewed conference articles and 7 non-scientific books.


Organisations:


A few popular links about my work:


Some of the stuff I wrote: Publications


My main (scientific) interests are:


A few WWW pages I like:


A selection of my mothers's pictures, Margarete Schiel † 2010.

My personal and most important contribution to the WWW

It's hard to believe, but there still exist words that are not to be found in the WWW (at least according to Google). Here is one of them:

Aulasaulalakaula which is what small children call after 'holy men' that are probably mental, wonder around and babble in the middle east.
Used by Thomas Mann in his book 'Joseph und seine Brüder' which is probably the best prose that humanity ever created (2. Buch, 1. Hauptstück, 'Von Körper und Geist')


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