Comparison of Different Types of Visemes using a Constraint-based Coarticulation Model
Abstract
A common approach to producing visual speech is to interpolate the parameters describing a sequence of mouth shapes, known as visemes, where visemes are the visual counterpart of phonemes. A single viseme typically represents a group of phonemes that are visually similar. Often these visemes are based on the static poses used in producing a phoneme. In this paper we investigate alternative representations for visemes, produced using motion-captured data, in conjunction with a constraint-based approach for visual speech production. We show that using visemes which incorporate more contextual information produces better results that using static pose visemes.
BibTeX
@inproceedings {10.2312:LocalChapterEvents:TPCG:TPCG10:199-206,
booktitle = {Theory and Practice of Computer Graphics},
editor = {John Collomosse and Ian Grimstead},
title = {{Comparison of Different Types of Visemes using a Constraint-based Coarticulation Model}},
author = {Lazalde, Oscar M. Martinez and Maddock, Steve},
year = {2010},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905673-75-3},
DOI = {10.2312/LocalChapterEvents/TPCG/TPCG10/199-206}
}
booktitle = {Theory and Practice of Computer Graphics},
editor = {John Collomosse and Ian Grimstead},
title = {{Comparison of Different Types of Visemes using a Constraint-based Coarticulation Model}},
author = {Lazalde, Oscar M. Martinez and Maddock, Steve},
year = {2010},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
ISBN = {978-3-905673-75-3},
DOI = {10.2312/LocalChapterEvents/TPCG/TPCG10/199-206}
}