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Silent Sound Technology Seminar

The document discusses silent sound technology, which allows people to have phone conversations without making any audible sounds. It works by using electromyography to detect tiny muscle movements in the lips and convert them into electrical signals that can be translated into speech. This technology could help people who have lost their voice communicate and allow silent phone calls in noisy environments. The document provides background on the technology's development and potential applications, such as translation between languages and use in office settings. It aims to advance the technology so it can be used in everyday devices within the next 5 to 10 years.

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Rohan Deshmukh
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views18 pages

Silent Sound Technology Seminar

The document discusses silent sound technology, which allows people to have phone conversations without making any audible sounds. It works by using electromyography to detect tiny muscle movements in the lips and convert them into electrical signals that can be translated into speech. This technology could help people who have lost their voice communicate and allow silent phone calls in noisy environments. The document provides background on the technology's development and potential applications, such as translation between languages and use in office settings. It aims to advance the technology so it can be used in everyday devices within the next 5 to 10 years.

Uploaded by

Rohan Deshmukh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Seminar Report

On “Silent Sound
Technology ”
Submitted By

Rohan Rais Deshmukh(SE 2610)


Under the Guidance of

Prof.K.J.Kulkarni
In partial fulfillment of the award of

SECOND YEAR (COMPUTER SCIENCE AND


ENGINEERING)

Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Technological University

Lonere (Maharashtra)

Department of Computer Science & Engineering

Shreeyash Collage of Enginnering and Technology,

Aurangabad
Maharastra State ,India

(2022-23)

Seminar Report
On

“Silent Sound Technology”

Submitted by

Rohan Rais Deshmukh

In partial fulfillment for the award of

Second Year of Engineering (Computer


science & Engineering)
Guided by

Prof.K.J.Kulkarni

Department of Computer Science & Engineering

Shreeyash College of Engineering & Technology

Aurangabad(2022-23)
SHREEYASH COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING &
TECHNOLOGY.
AURANGABAD
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND
ENGINEERING

CERTIFICATE

This is to certify that, the project "Internet of Things" submitted by (Rohan Rais
Deshmukh) is a bonafide work completed under supervision and guidance of
Prof.K.J.kulkarni and it is submitted towards the partial fulfillment for award of Bachelor of
Technology (Computer Science& Engineering) Degree of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar
Technological University,Lonere, Maharashtra.

Prof. K.J.kulkarni Prof. Renu Pareek


Guide Seminar Coordinator

Computer Science and Engineering Computer science and engineering

Prof.Dr.P.S.Deshpande

HOD

Computer Science And Engineering

DECLARATION

I hereby declare that I have completed and written the Seminar entitled "Silent Sound
Technology". It has not previously submitted for the basis of the award of any degree or
diploma or similar title of this for any other examining body or university.
Place: Aurangabad Rohan Rais Deshmukh

Date: ( SE 2610)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

I would like to thank respected Mrs. K.J.Kulkarni for giving me such a wonderful

opportunity to expand my knowledge for my own branch and giving me guidelines to present

seminar report. It helped me a lot to realize of what we study for.


Secondly, I would like to thank my parents who patiently helped me as i went through my work

and helped to modify and eliminate some of the irrelevant or un-necessary stuffs.

Thirdly, I would like to thank my friends who helped me to make my work more organized and

well-stacked till the end.

Next, I would thank Microsoft for developing such a wonderful tool like MS Word. It helped

my work a lot to remain error-free.

Last but clearly not the least, I would thank The Almighty for giving me strength to complete

my report on time.

Place: Aurangabad Rohan Rais Deshmukh

Date: (SE 2610)

ABSTRACT

I have made this report file on the topic Silent Sound Technology; I have tried my best to
elucidate all the relevant detail to the topic to be included in the report. While in the beginning

have tried to give a general view about this topic.

My efforts and wholehearted co-corporation of each and everyone has ended on a successful

note. I express my sincere gratitude to who assisting me throughout the preparation

of this topic. I thank him for providing me the reinforcement, confidence and most importantly

the track for the topic whenever I needed it.

CONTENT
Content Page.No
INTRODUCTION

NEED FOR SILENT SOUND

o ORIGINATION

METHODS

o ELECTROMYOGRAPHY

o IMAGE PROCESSING

ELECTROMYOGRAPHY

o ELECTRICAL CHARACTERSTICS

o HISTORY

o PROCEDURE

o NORMAL RESULT

o ABNORMAL RESULT

o EMG SIGNAL DECOMPOSITION

o APPLICATION OF EMG

FEATURES OF SILENT SOUND


TECHNOLOGY

RESEARCH

APPLICATIONS

CONCLUSIONS

REFRENCE

INTRODUCTION
Silence is the best answer for all the situations …even your mobile understands!

The word Cell Phone has become greatest buzz word in Cellular Communication
industry.

There are lots and lots of technology that tries to reduce the Noise pollution and make the

environment a better place to live in.

I will tell about a new technology known as Silent Sound Technology that will put an end

to Noise pollution.

You are in a movie theater or noisy restaurant or a bus etc where there is lot of noise around is

big issue while talking on a mobile phone. But in the future this problem is eliminated

with ”silent sounds”, a new technology unveiled at the CeBIT fair on Tuesday that transforms
lip

movements into a computer-generated voice for the listener at the other end of the phone.

It is a technology that helps you to transmit information without using your vocal cords . This

technology aims to notice lip movements & transform them into a computer generated sound
that

can be transmitted over a phone . Hence person on other end of phone receives the information
in

audio.

In the 2010 CeBIT's "future park", a concept "Silent Sound" Technology demonstrated which

aims to notice every movement of the lips and transform them into sounds, which could help

people who lose voices to speak, and allow people to make silent calls without bothering others.

The device, developed by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), uses electromyography,

monitoring tiny muscular movements that occur when we speak and converting them into

electrical pulses that can then be turned into speech, without a sound uttered.

‘Silent Sound’ technology aims to notice every movements of the lips and transform them into

sounds, which could help people who lose voices to speak, and allow people to make silent calls

without bothering others. Rather than making any sounds, your handset would decipher the

www.studymafia.org

movements your mouth makes by measuring muscle activity, then convert this into speech that

the person on the other end of the call can hear. So, basically, it reads your lips.
“We currently use electrodes which are glued to the skin. In the future, such electrodes might

for example by incorporated into cellphones,” said Michael Wand, from the KIT.

Figure1.1-common people talking at same place without isturbance

The technology opens up a host of applications, from helping people who have lost their voice

due to illness or accident to telling a trusted friend your PIN number over the phone without

anyone eavesdropping — assuming no lip-readers are around.

The technology can also turn you into an instant polyglot. Because the electrical pulses are

universal, they can be immediately transformed into the language of the user’s choice.

“Native speakers can silently utter a sentence in their language, and the receivers hear the

translated sentence in their language. It appears as if the native speaker produced speech in a

foreign language,” said Wand.

www.studymafia.org

The translation technology works for languages like English, French and Gernan, but for

languages like Chinese, where different tones can hold many different meanings, poses a

problem, he added.

Noisy people in your office? Not any more. “We are also working on technology to be used in
an

office environment,” the KIT scientist told AFP.

The engineers have got the device working to 99 percent efficiency, so the mechanical voice at

the other end of the phone gets one word in 100 wrong, explained Wand.

“But we’re working to overcome the remaining technical difficulties. In five, maybe ten years,

this will be useable, everyday technology,” he said.


NEED FOR SILENT SOUND
Silent Sound Technology will put an end to embarrassed situation such as-

An person answering his silent, but vibrating cell phone in a meeting, lecture or

performance, and whispering loudly, ‘ I can’t talk to you right now’ .

In the case of an urgent call, apologetically rushing out of the room in order to answer or

call the person back.

ORIGINATION:
Humans are capable of producing and understanding whispere speech in quiet environments

at remarkably low signal levels. Most people can also understand a few unspoken words by

lip-reading The idea of interpreting silent speech electronically or with a computer has been

around for a long time, and was popularized in the 1968 Stanley Kubrick science-fiction film

‘‘2001 – A Space Odyssey ” A major focal point was the DARPA Advanced Speech

Encoding Program (ASE ) of the early 2000’s, which funded research on low bit rate speech

synthesis ‘‘with acceptable intelligibility, quality , and aural speaker recognizability in

acoustically harsh environments”,

When you add lawnmowers, snow blowers, leaf blowers, jack hammers, jet engines,

transport trucks, and horns and buzzers of all types and descriptions you have a wall of

constant noise and irritation. Even when watching a television program at a reasonable

volume level you are blown out of your chair when a commercial comes on at the decibel

level of a jet.

The technology opens up a host of applications, from helping people who have lost their

voice due to illness or accident to telling a trusted friend your PIN number over the phone

without anyone eavesdropping — assuming no lip-readers are around.Native speakers can

silently utter a sentence in their language, and the receivers hear the translated sentence in
their language. It appears as if the native speaker produced speech in a foreign language.

METHODS
Silent Sound Technology is processed through some ways or methods. They are

Electromyograpy(EMG)

Image Processing

Electromyography :

The Silent Sound Technology uses electromyography, monitoring tiny muscular

movements that occur when we speak.

Monitored signals are converted into electrical pulses that can then be turned into speech,

without a sound uttered.

Electromyography (EMG) is a technique for evaluating and recording the electrical

activity produced by skeletal muscles.

An electromyography detects the electrical potential generated by muscle cells, when

these cells are electrically or neurologically activated.

Electromyographic sensors attached to the face records the electric signals produced by

the facial muscles, compare them with pre recorded signal pattern of spoken words

When there is a match that sound is transmitted on to the other end of the line and person

at the other end listen to the spoken words

Image Processing:
The simplest form of digital image processing converts the digital data tape into a film

image with minimal corrections and calibrations.


Then large mainframe computers are employed for sophisticated interactive manipulation

of the data.

In the present context, overhead prospective are employed to analyze the picture.

In electrical engineering and computer science, image processing is any form of signal

processing for which the input is an image, such as a photograph or video frame; the

output of image processing may be either an image or, a set of characteristics or

parameters related to the image. Most image-processing techniques involve treating the

image as a two-dimensional signal and applying standard signal-processing techniques to

it.

ELECTROMYOGRAPHY
Electromyography (EMG) is a technique for evaluating and recording the electrical activity

produced by skeletal muscles. EMG is performed using an instrument called an

electromyograph, to produce a record called an electromyogram. An electromyograph detects


the

electrical potential generated by muscle cells when these cells are electrically or neurologically

activated. The signals can be analyzed to detect medical abnormalities, activation level,

recruitment order or to analyze the biomechanics of human or animal movement.

The Silent Sound Technology uses electromyography, monitoring tiny muscular

movements that occur when we speak.

Monitored signals are converted into electrical pulses that can then be turned into speech,

without a sound uttered.

Electromyography (EMG) is a technique for evaluating and recording the electrical

activity produced by skeletal muscles.

An electromyography detects the electrical potential generated by muscle cells, when these

cells are electrically or neurologically activated.


ELECTRICAL CHARSTICSRACTE
The electrical source is the muscle membrane potential of about -90 mV. Measured EMG

potentials range between less than 50 μV and up to 20 to 30 mV, depending on the muscle under

observation.

Typical repetition rate of muscle motor unit firing is about 7–20 Hz, depending on the size of
the

muscle (eye muscles versus seat (gluteal) muscles), previous axonal damage and other factors.

Damage to motor units can be expected at ranges between 450 and 780 mV.

History:
The first documented experiments dealing with EMG started with Francesco Redi’s works in

1666. Redi discovered a highly specialized muscle of the electric ray fish (Electric Eel)

generated electricity. By 1773, Walsh had been able to demonstrate that the Eel fish’s muscle

tissue could generate a spark of electricity. In 1792, a publication entitled De Viribus

Electricitatis in Motu Musculari Commentarius appeared, written by Luigi Galvani, in which


the

author demonstrated that electricity could initiate muscle contractions. Six decades later, in
1849,

Dubois-Raymond discovered that it was also possible to record electrical activity during a

voluntary muscle contraction. The first actual recording of this activity was made by Marey in

1890, who also introduced the term electromyography. In 1922, Gasser and Erlanger used an

oscilloscope to show the electrical signals from muscles. Because of the stochastic nature of the

myoelectric signal, only rough information could be obtained from its observation. The

capability of detecting electromyographic signals improved steadily from the 1930s through the

1950s, and researchers began to use improved electrodes more widely for the study of muscles.

Clinical use of surface EMG (sEMG) for the treatment of more specific disorders began in the

1960s. Hardyck and his researchers were the first (1966) practitioners to use sEMG. In the early
1980s, Cram and Steger introduced a clinical method for scanning a variety of muscles using
an

EMG sensing device.

It is not until the middle of the 1980s that integration techniques in electrodes had sufficiently

advanced to allow batch production of the required small and lightweight instrumentation and

amplifiers. At present, a number of suitable amplifiers are commercially available. In the early

1980s, cables that produced signals in the desired microvolt range became available. Recent

research has resulted in a better understanding of the properties of surface EMG recording.

Surface electromyography is increasingly used for recording from superficial muscles in clinical

or kinesiological protocols, where intramuscular electrodes are used for investigating deep

muscles or localized muscle activity.

There are many applications for the use of EMG. EMG is used clinically for the diagnosis of

neurological and neuromuscular problems. It is used diagnostically by gait laboratories and by

clinicians trained in the use of biofeedback or ergonomic assessment. EMG is also used in many

types of research laboratories, including those involved in biomechanics, motor control,

neuromuscular physiology, movement disorders, postural control, and physical therapy.

PROCEDURE:
There are two kinds of EMG in widespread use: surface EMG and intramuscular (needle and

fine-wire) EMG. To perform intramuscular EMG, a needle electrode or a needle containing two

fine-wire electrodes is inserted through the skin into the muscle tissue. A trained professional

(such as a neurologist, physiatrist, or physical therapist) observes the electrical activity while

inserting the electrode. The insertional activity provides valuable information about the state of

the muscle and its innervating nerve. Normal muscles at rest make certain, normal electrical

signals when the needle is inserted into them. Then the electrical activity when the muscle is at

rest is studied. Abnormal spontaneous activity might indicate some nerve and/or muscle
damage.

Then the patient is asked to contract the muscle smoothly. The shape, size, and frequency of the
resulting motor unit potentials are judged. Then the electrode is retracted a few millimeters, and

again the activity is analyzed until at least 10–20 units have been collected. Each electrode track

gives only a very local picture of the activity of the whole muscle. Because skeletal muscles

differ in the inner structure, the electrode has to be placed at various locations to obtain an

accurate study.

Intramuscular EMG may be considered too invasive or unnecessary in some cases. Instead, a

surface electrode may be used to monitor the general picture of muscle activation, as opposed
to

the activity of only a few fibres as observed using an intramuscular EMG. This technique is
used

in a number of settings; for example, in the physiotherapy clinic, muscle activation is monitored

using surface EMG and patients have an auditory or visual stimulus to help them know when

they are activating the muscle (biofeedback).

Figure4.3-:Interfacing with electromyographer and body:

A motor unit is defined as one motor neuron and all of the muscle fibers it innervates. When a

motor unit fires, the impulse (called an action potential) is carried down the motor neuron to the

muscle. The area where the nerve contacts the muscle is called the neuromuscular junction, or

the motor end plate. After the action potential is transmitted across the neuromuscular junction,

an action potential is elicited in all of the innervated muscle fibers of that particular motor unit.

The sum of all this electrical activity is known as a motor unit action potential (MUAP). This

electrophysiologic activity from multiple motor units is the signal typically evaluated during an

EMG. The composition of the motor unit, the number of muscle fibres per motor unit, the

metabolic type of muscle fibres and many other factors affect the shape of the motor unit

potentials in the myogram.

Nerve conduction testing is also often done at the same time as an EMG to diagnose neurological

diseases.

Some patients can find the procedure somewhat painful, whereas others experience only a small

amount of discomfort when the needle is inserted. The muscle or muscles being tested may be
slightly sore for a day or two after the procedure.

www.studymafia.org

Normal results:

Muscle tissue at rest is normally electrically inactive. After the electrical activity caused by the

irritation of needle insertion subsides, the electromyograph should detect no abnormal

spontaneous activity (i.e., a muscle at rest should be electrically silent, with the exception of the

area of the neuromuscular junction, which is, under normal circumstances, very spontaneously

active). When the muscle is voluntarily contracted, action potentials begin to appear. As the

strength of the muscle contraction is increased, more and more muscle fibers produce action

potentials. When the muscle is fully contracted, there should appear a disorderly group of action

potentials of varying rates and amplitudes (a complete recruitment and interference pattern).

Abnormal results:
EMG is used to diagnose diseases that generally may be classified into one of the following

categories: neuropathies, neuromuscular junction diseases and myopathies.

Neuropathic disease has the following defining EMG characteristics:

An action potential amplitude that is twice normal due to the increased number of fibres

per motor unit because of reinnervation of denervated fibres

An increase in duration of the action potential

A decrease in the number of motor units in the muscle (as found using motor unit number

estimation techniques)

Myopathic disease has these defining EMG characteristics:


A decrease in duration of the action potential

A reduction in the area to amplitude ratio of the action potential

A decrease in the number of motor units in the muscle (in extremely severe cases only)

RESEARCH
With all of the millions of phones in circulation, there is great potential for increasing earnings

by saving 'lost calls' - telephone calls that go unanswered or uninitiated because the user is in a

situation in which he or she cannot speak - not just in business meetings, but everyday situations.

According to research, these 'lost calls' are worth $20 billion per year worldwide. For the

cellular operator, these are potential earnings that are currently being left on the table. When

these 'lost calls' become answerable, and can be conducted without making a sound, there is a

tremendous potential for increased profits. Now the research is going on technology that can be

used in Office Environment too.

APPLICATIONS
The Technology opens up a host of application such as mentioned below :

Helping people who have lost their voice due to illness or accident.

Telling a trusted friend your PIN number over the phone without anyone eavesdropping

— assuming no lip-readers are around.

Silent Sound Techniques is applied in Military for communicating secret/confidential

matters to others.

Native speakers can silently utter a sentence in their language, and the receivers can hear

the translated sentence in their language. It appears as if the native speaker produced

speech in a foreign language. The translation technology works for languages like

English, French and German, except Chinese, where different tones can hold many

different meanings.
Allow people to make silent calls without bothering others.

CONCLUSION
Thus Silent Sound Technology,one of the recent trends in the field of information

technology implements ”Talking Without Talking”.

It will be one of the innovation and useful technology and in mere future this technology

will be use in our day to day life.

‘Silent Sound’ technology aims to notice every movements of the lips and transform

them into sounds, which could help people who lose voices to speak, and allow people to

make silent calls without bothering others. Rather than making any sounds, your handset

would decipher the movements your mouth makes by measuring muscle activity, then

convert this into speech that the person on the other end of the call can hear. So,

basically, it reads your lips.

REFERENCES
www.google.com

www.wikipedia.com

www.studymafia.org

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