This research examines the evaluation of fSEMG (facial surface Electromyogram) for recognizing speech utterances in English and German language. The raw sampling is performed without sensing any audio signal, and the system is designed for Human Computer Interaction (HCI) based on voice commands. An effective technique is presented, which exploits facial muscle activity of the articulatory muscles and human factors for silent vowel recognition. The muscle signals are reduced to activity parameters by temporal integration, and the matching process is performed by an artificial neural back-propagation network that has to be trained for each individual human user. In the experiments, different style and speed in speaking and different language...
This research reports the recognition of facial move-ments during unvoiced speech and the identifica...
This paper evaluates the reliability of the use of muscle activation during unuttered (silent) vowel...
Speech is the natural medium of human communication, but audible speech can be overheard by bystande...
This research examines the evaluation of fSEMG (facial surface Electromyogram) for recognizing speec...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
The paper aims to identify speech using the facial muscle activity without the audio signals. The pa...
This paper presents a silent speech recognition technique based on facial muscle activity and video,...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
This paper presents a silent-speech interface based on electromyographic (EMG) signals recorded in t...
Abstract — This paper presents a silent-speech interface based on electromyographic (EMG) signals re...
Abstract—This paper presents the results of our research in silent speech recognition (SSR) using Su...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
This paper discusses the use of surface electromyography for automatic speech recognition. Electromy...
Besides its clinical applications, various researchers have shown that EMG can be utilised in areas ...
This research reports the recognition of facial move-ments during unvoiced speech and the identifica...
This paper evaluates the reliability of the use of muscle activation during unuttered (silent) vowel...
Speech is the natural medium of human communication, but audible speech can be overheard by bystande...
This research examines the evaluation of fSEMG (facial surface Electromyogram) for recognizing speec...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
The paper aims to identify speech using the facial muscle activity without the audio signals. The pa...
This paper presents a silent speech recognition technique based on facial muscle activity and video,...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
This paper presents a silent-speech interface based on electromyographic (EMG) signals recorded in t...
Abstract — This paper presents a silent-speech interface based on electromyographic (EMG) signals re...
Abstract—This paper presents the results of our research in silent speech recognition (SSR) using Su...
The need for developing reliable and flexible human computer interface is increased and applications...
This paper discusses the use of surface electromyography for automatic speech recognition. Electromy...
Besides its clinical applications, various researchers have shown that EMG can be utilised in areas ...
This research reports the recognition of facial move-ments during unvoiced speech and the identifica...
This paper evaluates the reliability of the use of muscle activation during unuttered (silent) vowel...
Speech is the natural medium of human communication, but audible speech can be overheard by bystande...