Learning to lip read words by watching videos

<p>Our aim is to recognise the words being spoken by a talking face, given only the video but not the audio. Existing works in this area have focussed on trying to recognise a small number of utterances in controlled environments (e.g. digits and alphabets), partially due to the shortage of su...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chung, J, Zisserman, A
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2018
Description
Summary:<p>Our aim is to recognise the words being spoken by a talking face, given only the video but not the audio. Existing works in this area have focussed on trying to recognise a small number of utterances in controlled environments (e.g. digits and alphabets), partially due to the shortage of suitable datasets.</p><p> We make three novel contributions: first, we develop a pipeline for fully automated data collection from TV broadcasts. With this we have generated a dataset with over a million word instances, spoken by over a thousand different people; second, we develop a two-stream convolutional neural network that learns a joint embedding between the sound and the mouth motions from unlabelled data. We apply this network to the tasks of audio-to-video synchronisation and active speaker detection; third, we train convolutional and recurrent networks that are able to effectively learn and recognize hundreds of words from this large-scale dataset.</p><p> In lip reading and in speaker detection, we demonstrate results that exceed the current state-of-the-art on public benchmark datasets.</p>