Jacqueline Vaissière


Jacqueline Vaissière is a French phonetician.

Career

Vaissière studied computing and automatic language translation under the supervision of Bernard Vauquois, at Centre d’Etudes et de Traduction Automatique, University of Grenoble, where she earned her PhD in 1971. She joined the Speech Communication Group at MIT, where she acquired a specialization in acoustic phonetics.
When the speech processing community moved towards black box models for recognition and synthesis, Jacqueline Vaissiere left the Centre National d'études des Télécommunications and chose to become a professor at the Sorbonne Nouvelle, where she succeeded René Gsell in 1990. Together with Annie Rialland, Jacqueline Vaissière headed the Phonetics and Phonology Laboratory at Paris 3/CNRS: Laboratoire de Phonétique et Phonologie until 2013.
From 2011–2014 she coordinated the 10-year project " " Empirical Foundations of Linguistics."
In 2010, she was elected "Membre de L'Institut Universitaire de France".

Distinctions

Vaissière was awarded the CNRS Silver Medal in 2009, at the joint suggestion of its Human and Social Sciences department and its computing/engineering department.
Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur

since 2010
She was elected as ISCA fellow in 2014: "For her pioneering works in clinical phonetics and her immense role at the interface between phonetics, phonology and speech engineering".

Some publications