Abstract

Visual speech recognition (VSR) is a challenging task that aims to interpret speech based solely on lip movements. However, although remarkable results have recently been reached in the field, this task remains an open research problem due to different challenges, such as visual ambiguities, the intra-personal variability among speakers, and the complex modeling of silence. Nonetheless, these challenges can be alleviated when the task is approached from a speaker-dependent perspective. Our work focuses on the adaptation of end-to-end VSR systems to a specific speaker. Hence, we propose two different adaptation methods based on the conventional fine-tuning technique, the so-called Adapters. We conduct a comparative study in terms of performance while considering different deployment aspects such as training time and storage cost. Results on the Spanish LIP-RTVE database show that both methods are able to obtain recognition rates comparable to the state of the art, even when only a limited amount of training data is available. Although it incurs a deterioration in performance, the Adapters-based method presents a more scalable and efficient solution, significantly reducing the training time and storage cost by up to 80%.

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