Cued speech: A visual communication mode for the deaf society

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Abstract

Cued Speech is a visual mode of communication that uses handshapes and placements in combination with the mouth movements of speech to make the phonemes of a spoken language look different from each other and clearly understandable to deaf individuals. The aim of Cued Speech is to overcome the problems of lip reading and thus enable deaf persons to wholly understand spoken language. In this study, automatic phoneme recognition in Cued Speech for French based on hidden Markov model (HMMs) is introduced. The phoneme correct for a normal-hearing cuer was 82.9%, and for a deaf 81.5%. The results also showed, that creating cuer-independent HMMs should not face any specific difficulties, other than those occured in audio speech recognition. © IEICE 2010.

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APA

Heracleous, P., & Beautemps, D. (2010). Cued speech: A visual communication mode for the deaf society. IEICE Electronics Express, 7(4), 234–239. https://doi.org/10.1587/elex.7.234

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