Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
876967 Medical Engineering & Physics 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

There are a number of situations where individuals wish to communicate verbally but are unable to use conventional means—so called ‘silent speech’. These include speakers in noisy and covert situations as well as patients who have lost their voice as a result of a laryngectomy or similar procedure. This paper focuses on those who are unable to speak following a laryngectomy and assesses the possibility of speech recognition based on a magnetic implant/sensors system. Permanent magnets are placed on the tongue and lips and the changes in magnetic field resulting from movement during speech are monitored using a set of magnetic sensors. The sensor signals are compared to sets of pre-recorded templates using the dynamic time warping (DTW) method, and the best match is identified. Experimental trials are reported for subjects with intact larynx, typically using 500–1000 utterances used for speaker dependant training and testing. It is shown that recognition rates of over 90% are achievable for vocabularies of at least 57 isolated words: sufficient to drive command-and-control applications.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Biomedical Engineering
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