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Grant, K. W.; Walden, B. E.; Seitz, P. F. (1998). Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearingimpaired subjects: Consonant recognition, sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2677-2690.

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Speech-Gesture Driven Multimodal Interfaces for.. - Sharma, Yeasin..   (Correct)

....Thus, signal enhancement using speaker and gaze detection, blind source separation and noise filtering will improve the quality of the speech signal significantly. Audio visual fusion scheme can help in this scenario. State of the art audio visual speech recognition research (e.g. lip reading) [138 141], indicates one possible solution to this problem. In similar situations the use of microphone arrays in combination with visual cues [142] to filter acoustic streams of several users improves speech recognition significantly. Nevertheless, they require high CPU power, close up high resolution ....

K. W. Grant, B. E. Walden, and P. F. Seitz, "Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearing-impaired subjects: Consonant recognition , sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration," J. Acoust. Soc. Am., vol. 103, pp. 2677-2690, 1998.


Bayes Factor of Model Selection Validates FLMP - Massaro, Cohen, Campbell..   (Correct)

....be aimed at individual performance. Most importantly, it might seem unreasonable that a model should be handicapped for flexibility when this flexibility is needed to account for individual variability. Some researchers are uncomfortable with any model who predictions require free parameters (Grant, Walden, Seitz, 1998). As a solution for the variability in Figure 5, they might propose that a subject could be given two independent tests. Parameters could be estimated from the first test and used to predict the results of the second (Dijkstra de Smedt, 1996) This is not an unreasonable suggestion as long as it ....

Grant, K. W., Walden, B. E., Seitz, P. F. (1998). Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearing-impaired subjects: Consonant recognition, sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2677-2690.


From Speech is Special to Computer Aided Language Learning - Dom Massaro And   (Correct)

No context found.

Grant, K. W.; Walden, B. E.; Seitz, P. F. (1998). Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearingimpaired subjects: Consonant recognition, sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2677-2690.


From Speech is Special to Computer Aided Language Learning - Dom Massaro And   (Correct)

No context found.

Grant, K. W.; Walden, B. E.; Seitz, P. F. (1998). Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearingimpaired subjects: Consonant recognition, sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2677-2690.


From Theory To Practice: Rewardsand Challenges - Dominic Massaro   (Correct)

No context found.

Grant, K. W.; Walden, B. E.; Seitz, P. F. (1998). Auditory-visual speech recognition by hearing-impaired subjects: Consonant recognition, sentence recognition, and auditory-visual integration. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103, 2677-2690.

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