학술논문

Speech articulator and user gesture measurements using micropower, interferometric EM-sensors
Document Type
Conference
Source
IMTC 2001. Proceedings of the 18th IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference. Rediscovering Measurement in the Age of Informatics (Cat. No.01CH 37188) Instrumentation and measurement technology Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference, 2001. IMTC 2001. Proceedings of the 18th IEEE. 3:1942-1946 vol.3 2001
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Speech
Acoustic measurements
Acoustic sensors
Humans
Vibration measurement
Magnetic heads
Power measurement
Frequency measurement
Acoustic devices
Biological system modeling
Language
ISSN
1091-5281
Abstract
Very low power, GHz frequency radar-like sensors can measure a variety of motions produced by a human user of machine interface devices. These data can be obtained at a distance and can measure hidden structures. Measurements range from acoustic induced 10-micron amplitude vibrations of vocal tract tissues, to few centimeter human speech articulator motions, to meter-class motions of the head, hands, or entire body. These EM sensors measure fringe motions as reflected EM waves are mixed with a local (homodyne) reference wave. These data, when processed using models of the system being measured provide real time states of interface positions or other targets vs. time. An example is speech articulator positions vs. time in the users body. This information appears to be useful for a surprisingly wide range of applications ranging from speech coding synthesis and recognition, speaker or object identification, noise cancellation, hand or head motions for cursor direction, and other applications.