Abstract

Objective assessments of lip movement can be beneficial in many disciplines including visual speech recognition, for surgical outcome assessment in patients with cleft lip and for the rehabilitation of patients with facial nerve impairments. The aim of this study was to develop an outcome measure for lip shape during speech using statistical shape analysis techniques. Lip movements during speech were captured from a sample of adult subjects considered as average using a three-dimensional motion capture system. Geometric Morphometrics was employed to extract three-dimensional coordinate data for lip shape during four spoken words decomposed into seven visemes (which included the resting lip shape). Canonical variate analysis was carried out in an attempt to statistically discriminate the seven visemes. The results showed that the second canonical variate discriminated the resting lip shape from articulation of the utterances and accounted for 17.2% of the total variance of the model. The first canonical variate was significant in discriminating between the utterances and accounted for 72.8% of the total variance of the model. The outcome measure was created using the 95% confidence intervals of the canonical variate scores for each subject plotted as ellipses for each viseme. The method and outcome model is proposed as reference to compare lip movement during speech in similar population groups.

Highlights

  • The study of lip shape during speech has an important role in visual speech recognition among other related disciplines

  • As maximum landmark reproducibility error has been previously been recorded at 1.39 mm (SD = 0.57) only mean displacements greater than 2.0 mm are considered as contributors to their respective visemes

  • Canonical variate analysis Six canonical variate (CV) were revealed through the analysis with the first explaining 72.8% of the variance, whereas the second explained only 17.2% (Table 8)

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Summary

Introduction

The study of lip shape during speech has an important role in visual speech recognition among other related disciplines. The shape of the lips during speech has three important functions [1] They are a place of closure for a number of phonemes such as /p/ and /b/. They can alter the size and shape of the oral cavity to differentiate /u/ from /i/ by lip protrusion. They can act as a sound source where air passes through the space between the upper incisors and the lower lip under pressure causing friction during /f/. It is clear that lip shape plays a significant role in verbal communication

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