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Multimodal Signal Processing : Theory and Applications for Human-Computer Interaction

Authors :
Jean-Philippe Thiran
Ferran Marqués
Hervé Bourlard
Jean-Philippe Thiran
Ferran Marqués
Hervé Bourlard
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Multimodal signal processing is an important research and development field that processes signals and combines information from a variety of modalities – speech, vision, language, text – which significantly enhance the understanding, modelling, and performance of human-computer interaction devices or systems enhancing human-human communication. The overarching theme of this book is the application of signal processing and statistical machine learning techniques to problems arising in this multi-disciplinary field. It describes the capabilities and limitations of current technologies, and discusses the technical challenges that must be overcome to develop efficient and user-friendly multimodal interactive systems. With contributions from the leading experts in the field, the present book should serve as a reference in multimodal signal processing for signal processing researchers, graduate students, R&D engineers, and computer engineers who are interested in this emerging field. - Presents state-of-art methods for multimodal signal processing, analysis, and modeling - Contains numerous examples of systems with different modalities combined - Describes advanced applications in multimodal Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) as well as in computer-based analysis and modelling of multimodal human-human communication scenes.

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9780123748256 and 9780080888699
Database :
eBook Index
Journal :
Multimodal Signal Processing : Theory and Applications for Human-Computer Interaction
Publication Type :
eBook
Accession number :
320751