39 research outputs found

    Whole Word Phonetic Displays for Speech Articulation Training

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    The main objective of this dissertation is to investigate and develop speech recognition technologies for speech training for people with hearing impairments. During the course of this work, a computer aided speech training system for articulation speech training was also designed and implemented. The speech training system places emphasis on displays to improve children\u27s pronunciation of isolated Consonant-Vowel-Consonant (CVC) words, with displays at both the phonetic level and whole word level. This dissertation presents two hybrid methods for combining Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) and Neural Networks (NNs) for speech recognition. The first method uses NN outputs as posterior probability estimators for HMMs. The second method uses NNs to transform the original speech features to normalized features with reduced correlation. Based on experimental testing, both of the hybrid methods give higher accuracy than standard HMM methods. The second method, using the NN to create normalized features, outperforms the first method in terms of accuracy. Several graphical displays were developed to provide real time visual feedback to users, to help them to improve and correct their pronunciations

    Recognizing Dysarthric Speech due to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis with Across-Speaker Articulatory Normalization

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    Abstract Recent dysarthric speech recognition studies using mixed data from a collection of neurological diseases suggested articulatory data can help to improve the speech recognition performance. This project was specifically designed for the speakerindependent recognition of dysarthric speech due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) using articulatory data. In this paper, we investigated three across-speaker normalization approaches in acoustic, articulatory, and both spaces: Procrustes matching (a physiological approach in articulatory space), vocal tract length normalization (a data-driven approach in acoustic space), and feature space maximum likelihood linear regression (a model-based approach for both spaces), to address the issue of high degree of variation of articulation across different speakers. A preliminary ALS data set was collected and used to evaluate the approaches. Two recognizers, Gaussian mixture model (GMM) -hidden Markov model (HMM) and deep neural network (DNN) -HMM, were used. Experimental results showed adding articulatory data significantly reduced the phoneme error rates (PERs) using any or combined normalization approaches. DNN-HMM outperformed GMM-HMM in all configurations. The best performance (30.7% PER) was obtained by triphone DNN-HMM + acoustic and articulatory data + all three normalization approaches, a 15.3% absolute PER reduction from the baseline using triphone GMM-HMM + acoustic data

    Visual units and confusion modelling for automatic lip-reading

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    Automatic lip-reading (ALR) is a challenging task because the visual speech signal is known to be missing some important information, such as voicing. We propose an approach to ALR that acknowledges that this information is missing but assumes that it is substituted or deleted in a systematic way that can be modelled. We describe a system that learns such a model and then incorporates it into decoding, which is realised as a cascade of weighted finite-state transducers. Our results show a small but statistically significant improvement in recognition accuracy. We also investigate the issue of suitable visual units for ALR, and show that visemes are sub-optimal, not but because they introduce lexical ambiguity, but because the reduction in modelling units entailed by their use reduces accuracy

    Trifoniklusterointi suomenkielisessä jatkuvassa puheentunnistuksessa

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    Tässä diplomityössä tutkitaan kontekstiriippuvien foneemimallien (trifonien) käyttöä suomenkielisen puhujariippuvan jatkuvan puheen tunnistimessa. Työn ensimmäisessä osassa tarkastellaan ihmisen puheentuotto- ja kuulojärjestelmiä, suomen kielen ominaisuuksia puheentunnistuksen kannalta sekä esitellään puheentunnistusjärjestelmien yleinen rakenne ja toiminta. Selostuksessa painotetaan foneemien kontekstiriippuvuutta sekä koartikulatorisia efektejä. Työn toisessa osassa opetetaan puhujariippuva tunnistin käyttäen kätkettyjä Markov-malleja (HMM) sekä Hidden Markov Model Toolkit (HTK)-ohjelmistoa. Trifoniklusteroinnissa kokeillaan datalähtöistä binääriseen päätöspuuhun perustuvaa menetelmää sekä menetelmiä, jotka käyttävät hyväkseen tietoa foneemien äännetyypeistä sekä ääntämispaikoista. Parhaat tunnistustulokset saavutetaan puuklusterointimenetelmällä, jolloin myös malleja on suurin määrä. Tunnistuskokeiden virheitä tarkastellaan laajasti. Foneemikohtaiset tyypilliset virheet ja eniten virheitä tuottaneet kontekstit analysoidaan

    Confusion modelling for lip-reading

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    Lip-reading is mostly used as a means of communication by people with hearing di�fficulties. Recent work has explored the automation of this process, with the aim of building a speech recognition system entirely driven by lip movements. However, this work has so far produced poor results because of factors such as high variability of speaker features, diffi�culties in mapping from visual features to speech sounds, and high co-articulation of visual features. The motivation for the work in this thesis is inspired by previous work in dysarthric speech recognition [Morales, 2009]. Dysathric speakers have poor control over their articulators, often leading to a reduced phonemic repertoire. The premise of this thesis is that recognition of the visual speech signal is a similar problem to recog- nition of dysarthric speech, in that some information about the speech signal has been lost in both cases, and this brings about a systematic pattern of errors in the decoded output. This work attempts to exploit the systematic nature of these errors by modelling them in the framework of a weighted finite-state transducer cascade. Results indicate that the technique can achieve slightly lower error rates than the conventional approach. In addition, it explores some interesting more general questions for automated lip-reading

    Malay articulation system for early screening diagnostic using hidden markov model and genetic algorithm

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    Speech recognition is an important technology and can be used as a great aid for individuals with sight or hearing disabilities today. There are extensive research interest and development in this area for over the past decades. However, the prospect in Malaysia regarding the usage and exposure is still immature even though there is demand from the medical and healthcare sector. The aim of this research is to assess the quality and the impact of using computerized method for early screening of speech articulation disorder among Malaysian such as the omission, substitution, addition and distortion in their speech. In this study, the statistical probabilistic approach using Hidden Markov Model (HMM) has been adopted with newly designed Malay corpus for articulation disorder case following the SAMPA and IPA guidelines. Improvement is made at the front-end processing for feature vector selection by applying the silence region calibration algorithm for start and end point detection. The classifier had also been modified significantly by incorporating Viterbi search with Genetic Algorithm (GA) to obtain high accuracy in recognition result and for lexical unit classification. The results were evaluated by following National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) benchmarking. Based on the test, it shows that the recognition accuracy has been improved by 30% to 40% using Genetic Algorithm technique compared with conventional technique. A new corpus had been built with verification and justification from the medical expert in this study. In conclusion, computerized method for early screening can ease human effort in tackling speech disorders and the proposed Genetic Algorithm technique has been proven to improve the recognition performance in terms of search and classification task

    Accurate synthesis of Dysarthric Speech for ASR data augmentation

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    Dysarthria is a motor speech disorder often characterized by reduced speech intelligibility through slow, uncoordinated control of speech production muscles. Automatic Speech recognition (ASR) systems can help dysarthric talkers communicate more effectively. However, robust dysarthria-specific ASR requires a significant amount of training speech, which is not readily available for dysarthric talkers. This paper presents a new dysarthric speech synthesis method for the purpose of ASR training data augmentation. Differences in prosodic and acoustic characteristics of dysarthric spontaneous speech at varying severity levels are important components for dysarthric speech modeling, synthesis, and augmentation. For dysarthric speech synthesis, a modified neural multi-talker TTS is implemented by adding a dysarthria severity level coefficient and a pause insertion model to synthesize dysarthric speech for varying severity levels. To evaluate the effectiveness for synthesis of training data for ASR, dysarthria-specific speech recognition was used. Results show that a DNN-HMM model trained on additional synthetic dysarthric speech achieves WER improvement of 12.2% compared to the baseline, and that the addition of the severity level and pause insertion controls decrease WER by 6.5%, showing the effectiveness of adding these parameters. Overall results on the TORGO database demonstrate that using dysarthric synthetic speech to increase the amount of dysarthric-patterned speech for training has significant impact on the dysarthric ASR systems. In addition, we have conducted a subjective evaluation to evaluate the dysarthric-ness and similarity of synthesized speech. Our subjective evaluation shows that the perceived dysartrhic-ness of synthesized speech is similar to that of true dysarthric speech, especially for higher levels of dysarthriaComment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2201.1157

    SYNTHESIZING DYSARTHRIC SPEECH USING MULTI-SPEAKER TTS FOR DSYARTHRIC SPEECH RECOGNITION

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    Dysarthria is a motor speech disorder often characterized by reduced speech intelligibility through slow, uncoordinated control of speech production muscles. Automatic Speech recognition (ASR) systems may help dysarthric talkers communicate more effectively. However, robust dysarthria-specific ASR requires a significant amount of training speech is required, which is not readily available for dysarthric talkers. In this dissertation, we investigate dysarthric speech augmentation and synthesis methods. To better understand differences in prosodic and acoustic characteristics of dysarthric spontaneous speech at varying severity levels, a comparative study between typical and dysarthric speech was conducted. These characteristics are important components for dysarthric speech modeling, synthesis, and augmentation. For augmentation, prosodic transformation and time-feature masking have been proposed. For dysarthric speech synthesis, this dissertation has introduced a modified neural multi-talker TTS by adding a dysarthria severity level coefficient and a pause insertion model to synthesize dysarthric speech for varying severity levels. In addition, we have extended this work by using a label propagation technique to create more meaningful control variables such as a continuous Respiration, Laryngeal and Tongue (RLT) parameter, even for datasets that only provide discrete dysarthria severity level information. This approach increases the controllability of the system, so we are able to generate more dysarthric speech with a broader range. To evaluate their effectiveness for synthesis of training data, dysarthria-specific speech recognition was used. Results show that a DNN-HMM model trained on additional synthetic dysarthric speech achieves WER improvement of 12.2% compared to the baseline, and that the addition of the severity level and pause insertion controls decrease WER by 6.5%, showing the effectiveness of adding these parameters. Overall results on the TORGO database demonstrate that using dysarthric synthetic speech to increase the amount of dysarthric-patterned speech for training has a significant impact on the dysarthric ASR systems
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