Juan Camilo Vásquez-Correa

Also published as: Juan Camilo Vasquez-Correa, Juan Camilo Vásquez Correa


2025

This demo paper presents a prototype of a multilingual, speech-based driver assistant, designed to support both English and Basque languages. The inclusion of Basque—a low-resource language with limited domain-specific training data—marks a significant contribution, as publicly available AI models, including Large Language Models, often underperform for such languages compared to high-resource languages like English. Despite these challenges, our system demonstrates robust performance, successfully understanding user queries and delivering rapid responses in a demanding environment: a car simulator. Notably, the system achieves comparable performance in both English and Basque, showcasing its effectiveness in addressing linguistic disparities in AI-driven applications. A demo of our prototype will be available in the workshop.

2024

2019

Speech deficits are common symptoms amongParkinson’s Disease (PD) patients. The automatic assessment of speech signals is promising for the evaluation of the neurological state and the speech quality of the patients. Recently, progress has been made in applying machine learning and computational methods to automatically evaluate the speech of PD patients. In the present study, we plan to analyze the speech signals of PD patients and healthy control (HC) subjects in three different languages: German, Spanish, and Czech, with the aim to identify biomarkers to discriminate between PD patients and HC subjects and to evaluate the neurological state of the patients. Therefore, the main contribution of this study is the automatic classification of PD patients and HC subjects in different languages with focusing on phonation, articulation, and prosody. We will focus on an intelligibility analysis based on automatic speech recognition systems trained on these three languages. This is one of the first studies done that considers the evaluation of the speech of PD patients in different languages. The purpose of this research proposal is to build a model that can discriminate PD and HC subjects even when the language used for train and test is different.