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Audiovisual Speech Processing
This book presents a complete overview of all aspects of audiovisual speech including perception, production, brain processing and technology.
Gérard Bailly (Edited by), Pascal Perrier (Edited by), Eric Vatikiotis-Bateson (Edited by)
9781107499324, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 5 February 2015
508 pages, 103 b/w illus.
23 x 15.3 x 3 cm, 0.74 kg
When we speak, we configure the vocal tract which shapes the visible motions of the face and the patterning of the audible speech acoustics. Similarly, we use these visible and audible behaviors to perceive speech. This book showcases a broad range of research investigating how these two types of signals are used in spoken communication, how they interact, and how they can be used to enhance the realistic synthesis and recognition of audible and visible speech. The volume begins by addressing two important questions about human audiovisual performance: how auditory and visual signals combine to access the mental lexicon and where in the brain this and related processes take place. It then turns to the production and perception of multimodal speech and how structures are coordinated within and across the two modalities. Finally, the book presents overviews and recent developments in machine-based speech recognition and synthesis of AV speech.
1. Three puzzles of multimodal speech perception R. E. Remez
2. Visual speech perception L. E. Bernstein
3. Dynamic information for face perception K. Lander and V. Bruce
4. Investigating auditory-visual speech perception development D. Burnham and K. Sekiyama
5. Brain bases for seeing speech: FMRI studies of speechreading R. Campbell and M. MacSweeney
6. Temporal organization of cued speech production D. Beautemps, M.-A. Cathiard, V. Attina and C. Savariaux
7. Bimodal perception within the natural time-course of speech production M.-A. Cathiard, A. Vilain, R. Laboissière, H. Loevenbruck, C. Savariaux and J.-L. Schwartz
8. Visual and audiovisual synthesis and recognition of speech by computers N. M. Brooke and S. D. Scott
9. Audiovisual automatic speech recognition G. Potamianos, C. Neti, J. Luettin and I. Matthews
10. Image-based facial synthesis M. Slaney and C. Bregler
11. A trainable videorealistic speech animation system T. Ezzat, G. Geiger and T. Poggio
12. Animated speech: research progress and applications D. W. Massaro, M. M. Cohen, M. Tabain, J. Beskow and R. Clark
13. Empirical perceptual-motor linkage of multimodal speech E. Vatikiotis-Bateson and K. G. Munhall
14. Sensorimotor characteristics of speech production G. Bailly, P. Badin, L. Revéret and A. Ben Youssef.
Subject Areas: Neurosciences [PSAN], Computational linguistics [CFX], Phonetics, phonology [CFH], Psycholinguistics [CFD]