• movements of the lips, face and tongue without sound. Estimates of the range of lip reading vary, with some figures as low as 30% because lip reading relies on...
    48 KB (5,519 words) - 04:21, 20 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Bad Lip Reading
    Bad Lip Reading is a YouTube channel created and run by an anonymous producer who intentionally lip-reads video clips poorly, for comedic effect. Rolling...
    34 KB (2,164 words) - 22:00, 21 July 2024
  • Automated Lip Reading (ALR) is a software technology developed by speech recognition expert Frank Hubner. A video image of a person talking can be analysed...
    1 KB (123 words) - 13:32, 6 November 2023
  • meemaw or mee-mawing, speaking with exaggerated mouth movements to allow lip reading Meemaw or Maw-maw, an affectionate term for a grandmother Constance "Meemaw"...
    288 bytes (69 words) - 08:04, 20 May 2024
  • 1993. In this episode, George gets Jerry's deaf girlfriend to use her lip reading talent to eavesdrop on his own ex-girlfriend and find out the reason...
    8 KB (995 words) - 15:07, 5 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Face detection
    essential for the process of language inference from visual cues. Automated lip reading has applications to help computers determine who is speaking which is...
    9 KB (946 words) - 18:54, 16 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Grace Coolidge
    Northampton, Massachusetts, to teach deaf children to communicate by lip reading, rather than by signing. She met Calvin Coolidge in 1904, and the two...
    15 KB (1,422 words) - 10:47, 18 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Millicent Simmonds
    advocates improving accessibility for the deaf, including designing a lip-reading face mask. Simmonds grew up in Bountiful, Utah in the United States....
    36 KB (2,956 words) - 14:21, 3 July 2024
  • on YouTube channels like Bad Lip Reading and television series such as Saturday Night Live and Mad TV. Bad Lip Reading made a widely viewed parody involving...
    235 KB (19,350 words) - 18:26, 4 August 2024
  • the removed speech may still be easily understood or not understood by lip reading. In subtitles, bleeped words are usually represented by "[bleep]". Sometimes...
    15 KB (1,718 words) - 13:34, 28 July 2024