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The GENEA Challenge 2022: A large evaluation of data-driven co-speech gesture generation

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arxiv 2208.10441 v1 pith:CXVOUSO6 submitted 2022-08-22 cs.HC cs.GRcs.LGcs.MMcs.SDeess.AS

The GENEA Challenge 2022: A large evaluation of data-driven co-speech gesture generation

classification cs.HC cs.GRcs.LGcs.MMcs.SDeess.AS
keywords motionchallengegesturespeechsystemsappropriatenesscaptureco-speech
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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This paper reports on the second GENEA Challenge to benchmark data-driven automatic co-speech gesture generation. Participating teams used the same speech and motion dataset to build gesture-generation systems. Motion generated by all these systems was rendered to video using a standardised visualisation pipeline and evaluated in several large, crowdsourced user studies. Unlike when comparing different research papers, differences in results are here only due to differences between methods, enabling direct comparison between systems. This year's dataset was based on 18 hours of full-body motion capture, including fingers, of different persons engaging in dyadic conversation. Ten teams participated in the challenge across two tiers: full-body and upper-body gesticulation. For each tier we evaluated both the human-likeness of the gesture motion and its appropriateness for the specific speech signal. Our evaluations decouple human-likeness from gesture appropriateness, which previously was a major challenge in the field. The evaluation results are a revolution, and a revelation. Some synthetic conditions are rated as significantly more human-like than human motion capture. To the best of our knowledge, this has never been shown before on a high-fidelity avatar. On the other hand, all synthetic motion is found to be vastly less appropriate for the speech than the original motion-capture recordings. Additional material is available via the project website at https://youngwoo-yoon.github.io/GENEAchallenge2022/

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