
Sagittal section of subject m3, showing planes in which axial and coronal slices were measured
Biomedical Imaging of Speech Production
The Illinois Speech and Language Engineering group acquires and
publishes biomedical imaging databases of speech production. The
databases served from this web page were acquired in collaboration
with the Illinois Speech and
Hearing Sciences Department, the Illinois Biomedical Magnetic
Resonance Facility, and the
Image data currently available on this site include:
- The Vowel MRI database, acquired while
Professor Hasegawa-Johnson was a post-doc at UCLA. Segmented 3D
images showing the vocal tracts of five talkers during production of
the vowels of English. Even with only five talkers, we believe that
this is currently the world's largest freely available 3D MRI database
of speech production.
- Reciting the alphabet.
Acquired at Carle Clinic in Urbana by Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, Andrew
Webb, Jim Ji, and Holly Tracey; 600ms/image.
- Microscopic imaging of a 1cm cubic specimen of excised cadaver
tongue tissue. Tissue samples analyzed by Jerald Moon at the
University of Iowa, and by David Kuehn, Wei Tian, and Mark
Hasegawa-Johnson at the University of Illinois.
- Coronal MRI sections, pixel
size 59x59 microns, slice thickness 49 microns, imaged by Victor
Schepkin at the University of Illinois BMRF.
- Histologic sections of the
same specimen, mounted at the University of Iowa.
Higher-level Neuromotor Coordination of the Organs of Speech
Hypothesis: during speech, tongue shapes are created as the weighted
sum of a small number of basic shapes. Experiment: we are currently
testing the hypothesis through data reduction and factor analysis
experiments applied to a series of tongue shapes derived from 3D MR
images of the tongue during vowel and consonant production.
Current Results: Factor Analysis of 3D Tongue Shapes
(PowerPoint)
Vowels MRI Imagebase
This database, collected at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and segmented at
UCLA, includes coronal and axial image stacks portraying five
different speakers during production of the ten monophthongal vowels
of English. One speaker also produces a selection of consonants.
Tongue and palate are outlined in the coronal image stack only.
Voice recordings were made shortly before or after the imaging session,
in both prone and sitting positions in a quiet recording studio.
CTMRedit: viewing, editing, and reconstruction software for MR and CT images
(download site)
Electromagnetic exposure safety of the Carstens Articulograph AG100
(HTML pre-print of a JASA article)