Abstract

In this paper, we describe our work in Spoken language Identification using Visual Speech Recognition (VSR) and analyze the effect of various visual speech units used to transcribe the visual speech on language recognition. We have proposed a new approach of word recognition followed by the word N-gram language model (WRWLM), which uses high-level syntactic features and the word bigram language model for language discrimination. Also, as opposed to the traditional visemic approach, we propose a holistic approach of using the signature of a whole word, referred to as a “Visual Word” as visual speech unit for transcribing visual speech. The result shows Word Recognition Rate (WRR) of 88% and Language Recognition Rate (LRR) of 94% in speaker dependent cases and 58% WRR and 77% LRR in speaker independent cases for English and Marathi digit classification task. The proposed approach is also evaluated for continuous speech input. The result shows that the Spoken Language Identification rate of 50% is possible even though the WRR using Visual Speech Recognition is below 10%, using only 1[Formula: see text]s of speech. Also, there is an improvement of about 5% in language discrimination as compared to traditional visemic approaches.

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