Silent Speech Interfaces for Speech Restoration: A Review
Jose A. Gonzalez-Lopez, Alejandro Gomez-Alanis, Juan M., Mart\'in-Do\~nas, Jos\'e L. P\'erez-C\'ordoba, Angel M. Gomez

TL;DR
This review discusses the current state of silent speech interfaces (SSIs) that use biosignals to enable communication for individuals with severe speech disorders, highlighting recent advances, techniques, and future challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of SSI technologies, biosignal modalities, and the specific challenges for real-world application in speech restoration.
Findings
SSIs utilize various biosignals like EMG, neural activity, and imaging.
Most SSIs are validated only in laboratory settings with healthy users.
Significant challenges remain before SSIs can be used in real-world scenarios.
Abstract
This review summarises the status of silent speech interface (SSI) research. SSIs rely on non-acoustic biosignals generated by the human body during speech production to enable communication whenever normal verbal communication is not possible or not desirable. In this review, we focus on the first case and present latest SSI research aimed at providing new alternative and augmentative communication methods for persons with severe speech disorders. SSIs can employ a variety of biosignals to enable silent communication, such as electrophysiological recordings of neural activity, electromyographic (EMG) recordings of vocal tract movements or the direct tracking of articulator movements using imaging techniques. Depending on the disorder, some sensing techniques may be better suited than others to capture speech-related information. For instance, EMG and imaging techniques are well suited…
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