ASCLSDNCFeb 27, 2021

Exploiting ultrasound tongue imaging for the automatic detection of speech articulation errors

arXiv:2103.00324v119 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the laborious analysis of speech disorders for clinicians, offering a tool to automate diagnosis and therapy monitoring, though it is incremental in applying existing methods to a specific domain.

The paper tackled the automatic detection of speech articulation errors in children using ultrasound tongue imaging and audio data, achieving an accuracy of 86.9% on typically developing speech and correctly detecting 86.6% of velar fronting errors identified by clinicians.

Speech sound disorders are a common communication impairment in childhood. Because speech disorders can negatively affect the lives and the development of children, clinical intervention is often recommended. To help with diagnosis and treatment, clinicians use instrumented methods such as spectrograms or ultrasound tongue imaging to analyse speech articulations. Analysis with these methods can be laborious for clinicians, therefore there is growing interest in its automation. In this paper, we investigate the contribution of ultrasound tongue imaging for the automatic detection of speech articulation errors. Our systems are trained on typically developing child speech and augmented with a database of adult speech using audio and ultrasound. Evaluation on typically developing speech indicates that pre-training on adult speech and jointly using ultrasound and audio gives the best results with an accuracy of 86.9%. To evaluate on disordered speech, we collect pronunciation scores from experienced speech and language therapists, focusing on cases of velar fronting and gliding of /r/. The scores show good inter-annotator agreement for velar fronting, but not for gliding errors. For automatic velar fronting error detection, the best results are obtained when jointly using ultrasound and audio. The best system correctly detects 86.6% of the errors identified by experienced clinicians. Out of all the segments identified as errors by the best system, 73.2% match errors identified by clinicians. Results on automatic gliding detection are harder to interpret due to poor inter-annotator agreement, but appear promising. Overall findings suggest that automatic detection of speech articulation errors has potential to be integrated into ultrasound intervention software for automatically quantifying progress during speech therapy.

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