845 research outputs found
Parallel Reference Speaker Weighting for Kinematic-Independent Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion
Acoustic-to-articulatory inversion, the estimation of articulatory kinematics from an acoustic waveform, is a challenging but important problem. Accurate estimation of articulatory movements has the potential for significant impact on our understanding of speech production, on our capacity to assess and treat pathologies in a clinical setting, and on speech technologies such as computer aided pronunciation assessment and audio-video synthesis. However, because of the complex and speaker-specific relationship between articulation and acoustics, existing approaches for inversion do not generalize well across speakers. As acquiring speaker-specific kinematic data for training is not feasible in many practical applications, this remains an important and open problem. This paper proposes a novel approach to acoustic-to-articulatory inversion, Parallel Reference Speaker Weighting (PRSW), which requires no kinematic data for the target speaker and a small amount of acoustic adaptation data. PRSW hypothesizes that acoustic and kinematic similarities are correlated and uses speaker-adapted articulatory models derived from acoustically derived weights. The system was assessed using a 20-speaker data set of synchronous acoustic and Electromagnetic Articulography (EMA) kinematic data. Results demonstrate that by restricting the reference group to a subset consisting of speakers with strong individual speaker-dependent inversion performance, the PRSW method is able to attain kinematic-independent acoustic-to-articulatory inversion performance nearly matching that of the speaker-dependent model, with an average correlation of 0.62 versus 0.63. This indicates that given a sufficiently complete and appropriately selected reference speaker set for adaptation, it is possible to create effective articulatory models without kinematic training data
Articulatory and bottleneck features for speaker-independent ASR of dysarthric speech
The rapid population aging has stimulated the development of assistive
devices that provide personalized medical support to the needies suffering from
various etiologies. One prominent clinical application is a computer-assisted
speech training system which enables personalized speech therapy to patients
impaired by communicative disorders in the patient's home environment. Such a
system relies on the robust automatic speech recognition (ASR) technology to be
able to provide accurate articulation feedback. With the long-term aim of
developing off-the-shelf ASR systems that can be incorporated in clinical
context without prior speaker information, we compare the ASR performance of
speaker-independent bottleneck and articulatory features on dysarthric speech
used in conjunction with dedicated neural network-based acoustic models that
have been shown to be robust against spectrotemporal deviations. We report ASR
performance of these systems on two dysarthric speech datasets of different
characteristics to quantify the achieved performance gains. Despite the
remaining performance gap between the dysarthric and normal speech, significant
improvements have been reported on both datasets using speaker-independent ASR
architectures.Comment: to appear in Computer Speech & Language -
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csl.2019.05.002 - arXiv admin note: substantial
text overlap with arXiv:1807.1094
Articulatory-WaveNet: Deep Autoregressive Model for Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion
Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion, the estimation of articulatory kinematics from speech, is an important problem which has received significant attention in recent years. Estimated articulatory movements from such models can be used for many applications, including speech synthesis, automatic speech recognition, and facial kinematics for talking-head animation devices. Knowledge about the position of the articulators can also be extremely useful in speech therapy systems and Computer-Aided Language Learning (CALL) and Computer-Aided Pronunciation Training (CAPT) systems for second language learners. Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion is a challenging problem due to the complexity of articulation patterns and significant inter-speaker differences. This is even more challenging when applied to non-native speakers without any kinematic training data. This dissertation attempts to address these problems through the development of up-graded architectures for Articulatory Inversion. The proposed Articulatory-WaveNet architecture is based on a dilated causal convolutional layer structure that improves the Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion estimated results for both speaker-dependent and speaker-independent scenarios. The system has been evaluated on the ElectroMagnetic Articulography corpus of Mandarin Accented English (EMA-MAE) corpus, consisting of 39 speakers including both native English speakers and Mandarin accented English speakers. Results show that Articulatory-WaveNet improves the performance of the speaker-dependent and speaker-independent Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion systems significantly compared to the previously reported results
Speaker Independent Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion
Acoustic-to-articulatory inversion, the determination of articulatory parameters from acoustic signals, is a difficult but important problem for many speech processing applications, such as automatic speech recognition (ASR) and computer aided pronunciation training (CAPT). In recent years, several approaches have been successfully implemented for speaker dependent models with parallel acoustic and kinematic training data. However, in many practical applications inversion is needed for new speakers for whom no articulatory data is available. In order to address this problem, this dissertation introduces a novel speaker adaptation approach called Parallel Reference Speaker Weighting (PRSW), based on parallel acoustic and articulatory Hidden Markov Models (HMM). This approach uses a robust normalized articulatory space and palate referenced articulatory features combined with speaker-weighted adaptation to form an inversion mapping for new speakers that can accurately estimate articulatory trajectories. The proposed PRSW method is evaluated on the newly collected Marquette electromagnetic articulography - Mandarin Accented English (EMA-MAE) corpus using 20 native English speakers. Cross-speaker inversion results show that given a good selection of reference speakers with consistent acoustic and articulatory patterns, the PRSW approach gives good speaker independent inversion performance even without kinematic training data
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Cortical encoding and decoding models of speech production
To speak is to dynamically orchestrate the movements of the articulators (jaw, tongue, lips, and larynx), which in turn generate speech sounds. It is an amazing mental and motor feat that is controlled by the brain and is fundamental for communication. Technology that could translate brain signals into speech would be transformative for people who are unable to communicate as a result of neurological impairments. This work first investigates how articulator movements that underlie natural speech production are represented in the brain. Building upon this, this work also presents a neural decoder that can synthesize audible speech from brain signals. Data to support these results were from direct cortical recordings of the human sensorimotor cortex while participants spoke natural sentences. Neural activity at individual electrodes encoded a diversity of articulatory kinematic trajectories (AKTs), each revealing coordinated articulator movements towards specific vocal tract shapes. The neural decoder was designed to leverage the kinematic trajectories encoded in the sensorimotor cortex which enhanced performance even with limited data. In closed vocabulary tests, listeners could readily identify and transcribe speech synthesized from cortical activity. These findings advance the clinical viability of using speech neuroprosthetic technology to restore spoken communication
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