InterSpeech 2021

Neural Speaker Embeddings for Ultrasound-based Silent Speech Interfaces
(Oral presentation)

Amin Honarmandi Shandiz (University of Szeged, Hungary), László Tóth (University of Szeged, Hungary), Gábor Gosztolya (MTA-SZTE RGAI, Hungary), Alexandra Markó (ELTE, Hungary), Tamás Gábor Csapó (MTA-ELTE LingArt, Hungary)
Articulatory-to-acoustic mapping seeks to reconstruct speech from a recording of the articulatory movements, for example, an ultrasound video. Just like speech signals, these recordings represent not only the linguistic content, but are also highly specific to the actual speaker. Hence, due to the lack of multi-speaker data sets, researchers have so far concentrated on speaker-dependent modeling. Here, we present multi-speaker experiments using the recently published TaL80 corpus. To model speaker characteristics, we adjusted the x-vector framework popular in speech processing to operate with ultrasound tongue videos. Next, we performed speaker recognition experiments using 50 speakers from the corpus. Then, we created speaker embedding vectors and evaluated them on the remaining speakers. Finally, we examined how the embedding vector influences the accuracy of our ultrasound-to-speech conversion network in a multi-speaker scenario. In the experiments we attained speaker recognition error rates below 3%, and we also found that the embedding vectors generalize nicely to unseen speakers. Our first attempt to apply them in a multi-speaker silent speech framework brought about a marginal reduction in the error rate of the spectral estimation step.