Improving Sign Recognition with Phonology
We use insights from research on American Sign Language (ASL) phonology to train models for isolated sign language recognition (ISLR), a step towards automatic sign language understanding. Our key insight is to explicitly recognize the role of phonology in sign production to achieve more accurate IS...
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Zusammenfassung: | We use insights from research on American Sign Language (ASL) phonology to
train models for isolated sign language recognition (ISLR), a step towards
automatic sign language understanding. Our key insight is to explicitly
recognize the role of phonology in sign production to achieve more accurate
ISLR than existing work which does not consider sign language phonology. We
train ISLR models that take in pose estimations of a signer producing a single
sign to predict not only the sign but additionally its phonological
characteristics, such as the handshape. These auxiliary predictions lead to a
nearly 9% absolute gain in sign recognition accuracy on the WLASL benchmark,
with consistent improvements in ISLR regardless of the underlying prediction
model architecture. This work has the potential to accelerate linguistic
research in the domain of signed languages and reduce communication barriers
between deaf and hearing people. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2302.05759 |