English

Alternative Visual Units for an Optimized Phoneme-Based Lipreading System

Image and Video Processing 2019-09-17 v1 Audio and Speech Processing

Abstract

Lipreading is understanding speech from observed lip movements. An observed series of lip motions is an ordered sequence of visual lip gestures. These gestures are commonly known, but as yet are not formally defined, as `visemes'. In this article, we describe a structured approach which allows us to create speaker-dependent visemes with a fixed number of visemes within each set. We create sets of visemes for sizes two to 45. Each set of visemes is based upon clustering phonemes, thus each set has a unique phoneme-to-viseme mapping. We first present an experiment using these maps and the Resource Management Audio-Visual (RMAV) dataset which shows the effect of changing the viseme map size in speaker-dependent machine lipreading and demonstrate that word recognition with phoneme classifiers is possible. Furthermore, we show that there are intermediate units between visemes and phonemes which are better still. Second, we present a novel two-pass training scheme for phoneme classifiers. This approach uses our new intermediary visual units from our first experiment in the first pass as classifiers; before using the phoneme-to-viseme maps, we retrain these into phoneme classifiers. This method significantly improves on previous lipreading results with RMAV speakers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.07147,
  title  = {Alternative Visual Units for an Optimized Phoneme-Based Lipreading System},
  author = {Helen Bear and Richard Harvey},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.07147},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

Accepted and published in Applied Sciences, 22pgs plus appendices and references

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:16:33.243Z