SDCVMMASJun 5, 2022

Tagged-MRI Sequence to Audio Synthesis via Self Residual Attention Guided Heterogeneous Translator

arXiv:2206.02284v31 citationsh-index: 79
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses a domain-specific challenge in speech motor control and disorder treatment by enabling audio synthesis from medical imaging data.

The paper tackled the problem of synthesizing audio waveforms from tagged-MRI sequences of tongue and oropharyngeal muscle movements, using a deep learning framework that achieved clear audio generation and surpassed competing methods.

Understanding the underlying relationship between tongue and oropharyngeal muscle deformation seen in tagged-MRI and intelligible speech plays an important role in advancing speech motor control theories and treatment of speech related-disorders. Because of their heterogeneous representations, however, direct mapping between the two modalities -- i.e., two-dimensional (mid-sagittal slice) plus time tagged-MRI sequence and its corresponding one-dimensional waveform -- is not straightforward. Instead, we resort to two-dimensional spectrograms as an intermediate representation, which contains both pitch and resonance, from which to develop an end-to-end deep learning framework to translate from a sequence of tagged-MRI to its corresponding audio waveform with limited dataset size.~Our framework is based on a novel fully convolutional asymmetry translator with guidance of a self residual attention strategy to specifically exploit the moving muscular structures during speech.~In addition, we leverage a pairwise correlation of the samples with the same utterances with a latent space representation disentanglement strategy.~Furthermore, we incorporate an adversarial training approach with generative adversarial networks to offer improved realism on our generated spectrograms.~Our experimental results, carried out with a total of 63 tagged-MRI sequences alongside speech acoustics, showed that our framework enabled the generation of clear audio waveforms from a sequence of tagged-MRI, surpassing competing methods. Thus, our framework provides the great potential to help better understand the relationship between the two modalities.

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