LipNet is a deep neural network for visual speech recognition. It was created by Yannis Assael, Brendan Shillingford, Shimon Whiteson and Nando de Freitas, researchers from the University of Oxford. The technique, outlined in a paper in November 2016,[1] is able to decode text from the movement of a speaker's mouth. Traditional visual speech recognition approaches separated the problem into two stages: designing or learning visual features, and prediction. LipNet was the first end-to-end sentence-level lipreading model that learned spatiotemporal visual features and a sequence model simultaneously.[2] Audio-visual speech recognition has enormous practical potential, with applications in improved hearing aids, medical applications, such as improving the recovery and wellbeing of critically ill patients,[3] and speech recognition in noisy environments,[4] such as Nvidia's autonomous vehicles.[5]
References
- ↑ Assael, Yannis M.; Shillingford, Brendan; Whiteson, Shimon; de Freitas, Nando (2016-12-16). "LipNet: End-to-End Sentence-level Lipreading". arXiv:1611.01599 [cs.LG].
- ↑ "AI that lip-reads 'better than humans'". BBC News. November 8, 2016.
- ↑ "Home Elementor". Liopa.
- ↑ Vincent, James (November 7, 2016). "Can deep learning help solve lip reading?". The Verge.
- ↑ Quach, Katyanna. "Revealed: How Nvidia's 'backseat driver' AI learned to read lips". www.theregister.com.