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Speech motion anomaly detection via cross-modal translation of 4D motion fields from tagged MRI

Authors :
Liu, Xiaofeng
Xing, Fangxu
Zhuo, Jiachen
Stone, Maureen
Prince, Jerry L.
Fakhri, Georges El
Woo, Jonghye
Liu, Xiaofeng
Xing, Fangxu
Zhuo, Jiachen
Stone, Maureen
Prince, Jerry L.
Fakhri, Georges El
Woo, Jonghye
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Understanding the relationship between tongue motion patterns during speech and their resulting speech acoustic outcomes -- i.e., articulatory-acoustic relation -- is of great importance in assessing speech quality and developing innovative treatment and rehabilitative strategies. This is especially important when evaluating and detecting abnormal articulatory features in patients with speech-related disorders. In this work, we aim to develop a framework for detecting speech motion anomalies in conjunction with their corresponding speech acoustics. This is achieved through the use of a deep cross-modal translator trained on data from healthy individuals only, which bridges the gap between 4D motion fields obtained from tagged MRI and 2D spectrograms derived from speech acoustic data. The trained translator is used as an anomaly detector, by measuring the spectrogram reconstruction quality on healthy individuals or patients. In particular, the cross-modal translator is likely to yield limited generalization capabilities on patient data, which includes unseen out-of-distribution patterns and demonstrates subpar performance, when compared with healthy individuals.~A one-class SVM is then used to distinguish the spectrograms of healthy individuals from those of patients. To validate our framework, we collected a total of 39 paired tagged MRI and speech waveforms, consisting of data from 36 healthy individuals and 3 tongue cancer patients. We used both 3D convolutional and transformer-based deep translation models, training them on the healthy training set and then applying them to both the healthy and patient testing sets. Our framework demonstrates a capability to detect abnormal patient data, thereby illustrating its potential in enhancing the understanding of the articulatory-acoustic relation for both healthy individuals and patients.<br />Comment: SPIE Medical Imaging 2024: Image Processing

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1438524380
Document Type :
Electronic Resource