The possibility of speech processing in the absence of an
intelligible acoustic signal has given rise to the idea of a
`silent speech' interface, to be used as an aid for the
speech-handicapped, or as part of a communications system
operating in silence-required or high-background-noise
environments. The article first outlines the emergence of the
silent speech interface from the fields of speech production,
automatic speech processing, speech pathology research, and
telecommunications privacy issues, and then follows with a
presentation of demonstrator systems based on seven different
types of technologies. A concluding section underlining some of
the common challenges faced by silent speech interface
researchers, and ideas for possible future directions, is also
provided.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Denby2010-gs
%A Denby, B
%A Schultz, T
%A Honda, K
%A Hueber, T
%A Gilbert, J M
%A Brumberg, J S
%D 2010
%J Speech Commun.
%K Cellular Silent Speech pathologies; recognition; speech; synthesis;subvocal telephones;
%N 4
%P 270--287
%T Silent speech interfaces
%V 52
%X The possibility of speech processing in the absence of an
intelligible acoustic signal has given rise to the idea of a
`silent speech' interface, to be used as an aid for the
speech-handicapped, or as part of a communications system
operating in silence-required or high-background-noise
environments. The article first outlines the emergence of the
silent speech interface from the fields of speech production,
automatic speech processing, speech pathology research, and
telecommunications privacy issues, and then follows with a
presentation of demonstrator systems based on seven different
types of technologies. A concluding section underlining some of
the common challenges faced by silent speech interface
researchers, and ideas for possible future directions, is also
provided.
@article{Denby2010-gs,
abstract = {The possibility of speech processing in the absence of an
intelligible acoustic signal has given rise to the idea of a
`silent speech' interface, to be used as an aid for the
speech-handicapped, or as part of a communications system
operating in silence-required or high-background-noise
environments. The article first outlines the emergence of the
silent speech interface from the fields of speech production,
automatic speech processing, speech pathology research, and
telecommunications privacy issues, and then follows with a
presentation of demonstrator systems based on seven different
types of technologies. A concluding section underlining some of
the common challenges faced by silent speech interface
researchers, and ideas for possible future directions, is also
provided.},
added-at = {2023-06-06T00:19:46.000+0200},
author = {Denby, B and Schultz, T and Honda, K and Hueber, T and Gilbert, J M and Brumberg, J S},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27e043553ea34694e26fa21a43a309c2e/willwade},
interhash = {82999bc6217e508a9d78f16e59aae3c1},
intrahash = {7e043553ea34694e26fa21a43a309c2e},
journal = {Speech Commun.},
keywords = {Cellular Silent Speech pathologies; recognition; speech; synthesis;subvocal telephones;},
month = apr,
number = 4,
pages = {270--287},
timestamp = {2023-06-06T00:20:15.000+0200},
title = {Silent speech interfaces},
volume = 52,
year = 2010
}