articulatory recognition using real-time MRI data
The large corpus of real time magnetic resonance image sequences of the vocal tract during speech production that was recently acquired and can be referred to as MRI-TIMIT, provides us with a unique platform for systematically studying articulatory dynamics. Compared to previously collected articulatory datasets, e.g., using articulography or X-rays, MRI-TIMIT is a rich source of information for the entire vocal tract and not only for certain articulatory landmarks and further has the potential to continue increasing in size covering a large variety of speakers and speaking styles. In this work, we investigate an articulatory representation based on full vocal tract shapes. We employ an articulatory recognition framework in MRI-TIMIT to analyze its merits and drawbacks. We argue that articulatory recognition can serve as a general validation tool for real-time MRI based articulatory representations.
You may download the vocal tract contours that were used in the experiments described in Katsamanis et al. 2011 as a [tgz] file.