Scientists turn brain signals into speech, may help people who cannot talk

Scientists turn brain signals into speech, may help people who cannot talk

by Joseph Anthony
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People robbed of the ability to talk due to a stroke or another medical condition may soon have real hope of regaining a voice thanks to technology that harnesses brain activity to produce synthesized speech, researchers said on Wednesday.


Scientists at the University of California, San Francisco, implanted electrodes into the brains of volunteers and decoded signals in cerebral speech centers to guide a computer-simulated version of their vocal tract โ€“ lips, jaw, tongue and larynx โ€“ to generate speech through a synthesizer.

This speech was mostly intelligible, though somewhat slurred in parts, raising hope among the researchers that with some improvements a clinically viable device could be developed in the coming years for patients with speech loss.

โ€œWe were shocked when we first heard the results โ€“ we couldnโ€™t believe our ears. It was incredibly exciting that a lot of the aspects of real speech were present in the output from the synthesizer,โ€ said study co-author and UCSF doctoral student Josh Chartier. โ€œClearly, there is more work to get this to be more natural and intelligible but we were very impressed by how much can be decoded from brain activity.โ€

Stroke, ailments such as cerebral palsy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinsonโ€™s disease and multiple sclerosis, brain injuries and cancer sometimes take away a personโ€™s ability to speak.


Some people use devices that track eye or residual facial muscle movements to laboriously spell out words letter-by-letter, but producing text or synthesized speech this way is slow, typically no more than 10 words per minute. Natural speech is usually 100 to 150 words per minute.

The five volunteers, all capable of speaking, were given the opportunity to take part because they were epilepsy patients who already were going to have electrodes temporarily implanted in their brains to map the source of their seizures before neurosurgery. Future studies will test the technology on people who are unable to speak.

The volunteers read aloud while activity in brain regions involved in language production was tracked. The researchers discerned the vocal tract movements needed to produce the speech, and created a โ€œvirtual vocal tractโ€ for each participant that could be controlled by their brain activity and produce synthesized speech.


โ€œVery few of us have any real idea, actually, of whatโ€™s going on in our mouth when we speak,โ€ said neurosurgeon Edward Chang, senior author of the study published in the journal Nature. โ€œThe brain translates those thoughts of what you want to say into movements of the vocal tract, and thatโ€™s what weโ€™re trying to decode.โ€

The researchers were more successful in synthesizing slower speech sounds like โ€œshโ€ and less successful with abrupt sounds like โ€œbโ€ and โ€œp.โ€ The technology did not work as well when the researchers tried to decode the brain activity directly into speech, without using a virtual vocal tract.

โ€œWe are still working on making the synthesized speech crisper and less slurred. This is in part a consequence of the algorithms we are using, and we think we should be able to get better results as we improve the technology,โ€ Chartier said.

โ€œWe hope that these findings give hope to people with conditions that prevent them from expressing themselves that one day we will be able to restore the ability to communicate, which is such a fundamental part of who we are as humans,โ€ he added.

REUTERS

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