Analysis of momentous fragmentary formants in Talaqi-like neoteric assessment of Quran recitation using MFCC miniature features of Quranic syllables

The use of technological speech recognition systems with a variety of approaches and techniques has grown rapidly in a variety of human-machine interaction applications. Further to this, a computerized assessment system to identify errors in reading the Qur’an can be developed to practice the advant...

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Main Authors: Adam, Mohamad Zulkefli, Shafie, Noraimi, Abas, Hafiza, Azizan, Azizul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science and Information Organization 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/94577/1/MohamadZulkefli2021_AnalysisofMomentousFragmentaryFormants.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/94577/
http://dx.doi.org/10.14569/IJACSA.2021.0120960
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Summary:The use of technological speech recognition systems with a variety of approaches and techniques has grown rapidly in a variety of human-machine interaction applications. Further to this, a computerized assessment system to identify errors in reading the Qur’an can be developed to practice the advantages of technology that exist today. Based on Quranic syllable utterances, which contain Tajweed rules that generally consist of Makhraj (articulation process), Sifaat (letter features or pronunciation) and Harakat (pronunciation extension), this paper attempts to present the technological capabilities in realizing Quranic recitation assessment. The transformation of the digital signal of the Quranic voice with the identification of reading errors (based on the Law of Tajweed) is the main focus of this paper. This involves many stages in the process related to the representation of Quranic syllable-based Recitation Speech Signal (QRSS), feature extraction, non-phonetic transcription Quranic Recitation Acoustic Model (QRAM), and threshold classification processes. MFCC-Formants are used in a miniature state that are hybridized with three bands in representing QRSS combined vowels and consonants. A human-guided threshold classification approach is used to assess recitation based on Quranic syllables and threshold classification performance for the low, medium, and high band groups with performances of 87.27%, 86.86%and 86.33%, respectively.