Publication in conference proceedings
Towards a silent speech interface for Portuguese: Surface electromyography and the nasality challenge
João Freitas (Freitas, J.); António Teixeira (Teixeira, A.); Miguel Sales Dias (Dias, M. S.);
Proceedings of the International Conference on Bio-inspired Systems and Signal Processing - BIOSIGNALS, (BIOSTEC 2012)
Year (definitive publication)
2012
Language
English
Country
Portugal
More Information
Web of Science®

This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®

Scopus

Times Cited: 22

(Last checked: 2024-05-14 22:03)

View record in Scopus

Google Scholar

Times Cited: 39

(Last checked: 2024-05-19 01:02)

View record in Google Scholar

Abstract
A Silent Speech Interface (SSI) aims at performing Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) in the absence of an intelligible acoustic signal. It can be used as a human-computer interaction modality in high-background-noise environments, such as living rooms, or in aiding speech-impaired individuals, increasing in prevalence with ageing. If this interaction modality is made available for users own native language, with adequate performance, and since it does not rely on acoustic information, it will be less susceptible to problems related to environmental noise, privacy, information disclosure and exclusion of speech impaired persons. To contribute to the existence of this promising modality for Portuguese, for which no SSI implementation is known, we are exploring and evaluating the potential of state-of-the-art approaches. One of the major challenges we face in SSI for European Portuguese is recognition of nasality, a core characteristic of this language Phonetics and Phonology. In this paper a silent speech recognition experiment based on Surface Electromyography is presented. Results confirmed recognition problems between minimal pairs of words that only differ on nasality of one of the phones, causing 50% of the total error and evidencing accuracy performance degradation, which correlates well with the exiting knowledge.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Silent speech,Human-computer interface,European Portuguese,Surface electromyography,Nasality
  • Computer and Information Sciences - Natural Sciences
  • Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering - Engineering and Technology
  • Languages and Literature - Humanities
Funding Records
Funding Reference Funding Entity
QREN 7900 LUL Comissão Europeia
FP7-PEOPLE-2009-IAPP Golem
251415 Golem

With the objective to increase the research activity directed towards the achievement of the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, the possibility of associating scientific publications with the Sustainable Development Goals is now available in Ciência-IUL. These are the Sustainable Development Goals identified by the author(s) for this publication. For more detailed information on the Sustainable Development Goals, click here.