333 research outputs found

    Lipreading with Long Short-Term Memory

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    Lipreading, i.e. speech recognition from visual-only recordings of a speaker's face, can be achieved with a processing pipeline based solely on neural networks, yielding significantly better accuracy than conventional methods. Feed-forward and recurrent neural network layers (namely Long Short-Term Memory; LSTM) are stacked to form a single structure which is trained by back-propagating error gradients through all the layers. The performance of such a stacked network was experimentally evaluated and compared to a standard Support Vector Machine classifier using conventional computer vision features (Eigenlips and Histograms of Oriented Gradients). The evaluation was performed on data from 19 speakers of the publicly available GRID corpus. With 51 different words to classify, we report a best word accuracy on held-out evaluation speakers of 79.6% using the end-to-end neural network-based solution (11.6% improvement over the best feature-based solution evaluated).Comment: Accepted for publication at ICASSP 201

    Speaker-Independent Classification of Phonetic Segments from Raw Ultrasound in Child Speech

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    Ultrasound tongue imaging (UTI) provides a convenient way to visualize the vocal tract during speech production. UTI is increasingly being used for speech therapy, making it important to develop automatic methods to assist various time-consuming manual tasks currently performed by speech therapists. A key challenge is to generalize the automatic processing of ultrasound tongue images to previously unseen speakers. In this work, we investigate the classification of phonetic segments (tongue shapes) from raw ultrasound recordings under several training scenarios: speaker-dependent, multi-speaker, speaker-independent, and speaker-adapted. We observe that models underperform when applied to data from speakers not seen at training time. However, when provided with minimal additional speaker information, such as the mean ultrasound frame, the models generalize better to unseen speakers.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published in ICASSP2019 (IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, 2019

    Towards a Practical Silent Speech Interface Based on Vocal Tract Imaging

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    Intégralité des actes de cette conférence disponible au lien suivant: http://www.issp2011.uqam.ca/upload/files/proceedings.pdfInternational audienceThe paper describes advances in the development of an ultrasound silent speech interface for use in silent communications applications or as a speaking aid for persons who have undergone a laryngectomy. It reports some first steps towards making such a device lightweight, portable, interactive, and practical to use. Simple experimental tests of an interactive silent speech interface for everyday applications are described. Possible future improvements including extension to continuous speech and real time operation are discussed.Cet article décrit les avancements dans le développement d'une interface ultrasonore de parole silencieuse, pour des applications en communication silencieuse ou comme une aide pour les personnes laryngectomisées. Nous rapportons les premiers pas pour réaliser une telle interface portable, interactive, et pratique à utiliser. De simples tests expérimentaux de cette interface pour des applications quotidiennes sont décrits. Des améliorations futures possibles incluant l'extension à la parole continue et aux traitements en temps réels sont discutées

    Towards a Multimodal Silent Speech Interface for European Portuguese

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    Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) in the presence of environmental noise is still a hard problem to tackle in speech science (Ng et al., 2000). Another problem well described in the literature is the one concerned with elderly speech production. Studies (Helfrich, 1979) have shown evidence of a slower speech rate, more breaks, more speech errors and a humbled volume of speech, when comparing elderly with teenagers or adults speech, on an acoustic level. This fact makes elderly speech hard to recognize, using currently available stochastic based ASR technology. To tackle these two problems in the context of ASR for HumanComputer Interaction, a novel Silent Speech Interface (SSI) in European Portuguese (EP) is envisioned.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio

    A silent speech system based on permanent magnet articulography and direct synthesis

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    In this paper we present a silent speech interface (SSI) system aimed at restoring speech communication for individuals who have lost their voice due to laryngectomy or diseases affecting the vocal folds. In the proposed system, articulatory data captured from the lips and tongue using permanent magnet articulography (PMA) are converted into audible speech using a speaker-dependent transformation learned from simultaneous recordings of PMA and audio signals acquired before laryngectomy. The transformation is represented using a mixture of factor analysers, which is a generative model that allows us to efficiently model non-linear behaviour and perform dimensionality reduction at the same time. The learned transformation is then deployed during normal usage of the SSI to restore the acoustic speech signal associated with the captured PMA data. The proposed system is evaluated using objective quality measures and listening tests on two databases containing PMA and audio recordings for normal speakers. Results show that it is possible to reconstruct speech from articulator movements captured by an unobtrusive technique without an intermediate recognition step. The SSI is capable of producing speech of sufficient intelligibility and naturalness that the speaker is clearly identifiable, but problems remain in scaling up the process to function consistently for phonetically rich vocabularies

    Silent Speech Interfaces for Speech Restoration: A Review

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    This work was supported in part by the Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (AEI) under Grant PID2019-108040RB-C22/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. The work of Jose A. Gonzalez-Lopez was supported in part by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under Juan de la Cierva-Incorporation Fellowship (IJCI-2017-32926).This review summarises the status of silent speech interface (SSI) research. SSIs rely on non-acoustic biosignals generated by the human body during speech production to enable communication whenever normal verbal communication is not possible or not desirable. In this review, we focus on the first case and present latest SSI research aimed at providing new alternative and augmentative communication methods for persons with severe speech disorders. SSIs can employ a variety of biosignals to enable silent communication, such as electrophysiological recordings of neural activity, electromyographic (EMG) recordings of vocal tract movements or the direct tracking of articulator movements using imaging techniques. Depending on the disorder, some sensing techniques may be better suited than others to capture speech-related information. For instance, EMG and imaging techniques are well suited for laryngectomised patients, whose vocal tract remains almost intact but are unable to speak after the removal of the vocal folds, but fail for severely paralysed individuals. From the biosignals, SSIs decode the intended message, using automatic speech recognition or speech synthesis algorithms. Despite considerable advances in recent years, most present-day SSIs have only been validated in laboratory settings for healthy users. Thus, as discussed in this paper, a number of challenges remain to be addressed in future research before SSIs can be promoted to real-world applications. If these issues can be addressed successfully, future SSIs will improve the lives of persons with severe speech impairments by restoring their communication capabilities.Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (AEI) PID2019-108040RB-C22/AEI/10.13039/501100011033Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under Juan de la Cierva-Incorporation Fellowship IJCI-2017-3292

    Ultrasound based Silent Speech Interface using Deep Learning

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    Silent Speech Interface (SSI) is a technology able to synthesize speech in the absence of any acoustic signal. It can be useful in cases like laryngectomy patients, noisy environments or silent calls. This thesis explores the particular case of SSI using ultrasound images of the tongue as input signals. A 'direct synthesis' approach based on Deep Neural Networks and Mel-generalized cepstral coefficients is proposed. This document is an extension of Csapó et al. "DNN-based Ultrasound-to-Speech Conversion for a Silent Speech Interface". Several deep learning models, such as the basic Feed-forward Neural Networks, Convolutional Neural Networks and Recurrent Neural Networks are presented and discussed. A denoising pre-processing based on a Deep Convolutional Autoencoder has also been studied. A considerable number of experiments using a set of different deep learning architectures and an extensive hyperperameter optimization study have been realized. The different experiments have been testing and rating several objective and subjective quality measures. According to the experiments, an architecture based on a CNN and bidirectional LSTM layers has shown the best results in both objective and subjective terms.Silent Speech Interface (SSI) is a technology able to synthesize speech in the absence of any acoustic signal. It can be useful in cases like laryngectomy patients, noisy environments or silent calls. This thesis explores the particular case of SSI using ultrasound images of the tongue as input signals. A 'direct synthesis' approach based on Deep Neural Networks and Mel-generalized cepstral coefficients is proposed. This document is an extension of Csapó et al. "DNN-based Ultrasound-to-Speech Conversion for a Silent Speech Interface". Several deep learning models, such as the basic Feed-forward Neural Networks, Convolutional Neural Networks and Recurrent Neural Networks are presented and discussed. A denoising pre-processing based on a Deep Convolutional Autoencoder has also been studied. A considerable number of experiments using a set of different deep learning architectures and an extensive hyperperameter optimization study have been realized. The different experiments have been testing and rating several objective and subjective quality measures. According to the experiments, an architecture based on a CNN and bidirectional LSTM layers has shown the best results in both objective and subjective terms.Silent Speech Interface (SSI) és una tecnologia capaç de sintetitzar veu partint únicament de senyals no-acústiques. Pot tenir gran utilitat en casos com pacients de laringectomia, ambients sorollosos o trucades silencioses. Aquesta tèsis explora el cas particular de SSI utilitzant imatges de la llengua captades amb ultrasons com a senyals d'entrada. Es proposa un enfocament de 'síntesis directa' basat en Xarxes Neuronals Profundes i coeficients Mel-generalized cepstral. Aquest document és una extensió del treball de Csapó et al. "DNN-based Ultrasound-to-Speech Conversion for a Silent Speech Interface" . Diversos models de xarxes neuronals són presentats i discutits, com les bàsiques xarxes neuronals directes, xarxes neuronals convolucionals o xarxes neuronals recurrents. També s'ha estudiat un pre-processat reductor de soroll basat en un Autoencoder convolucional profund. S'ha portat a terme un nombre considerable d'experiments utilitzant diverses arquitectures de Deep Learning, així com un extens estudi d'optimització d'hyperparàmetres. Els diferents experiments han estat evaluar i qualificar a partir de diferentes mesures de qualitat objectives i subjectives. Els millors resultats, tant en termes objectius com subjectius, els ha presentat una arquitectura basada en una CNN i capes bidireccionals de LSTMs
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