745 research outputs found

    An analysis of environment, microphone and data simulation mismatches in robust speech recognition

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    Speech enhancement and automatic speech recognition (ASR) are most often evaluated in matched (or multi-condition) settings where the acoustic conditions of the training data match (or cover) those of the test data. Few studies have systematically assessed the impact of acoustic mismatches between training and test data, especially concerning recent speech enhancement and state-of-the-art ASR techniques. In this article, we study this issue in the context of the CHiME- 3 dataset, which consists of sentences spoken by talkers situated in challenging noisy environments recorded using a 6-channel tablet based microphone array. We provide a critical analysis of the results published on this dataset for various signal enhancement, feature extraction, and ASR backend techniques and perform a number of new experiments in order to separately assess the impact of di↵erent noise environments, di↵erent numbers and positions of microphones, or simulated vs. real data on speech enhancement and ASR performance. We show that, with the exception of minimum variance distortionless response (MVDR) beamforming, most algorithms perform consistently on real and simulated data and can benefit from training on simulated data. We also find that training on di↵erent noise environments and di↵erent microphones barely a↵ects the ASR performance, especially when several environments are present in the training data: only the number of microphones has a significant impact. Based on these results, we introduce the CHiME-4 Speech Separation and Recognition Challenge, which revisits the CHiME-3 dataset and makes it more challenging by reducing the number of microphones available for testing

    High-resolution sinusoidal analysis for resolving harmonic collisions in music audio signal processing

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    Many music signals can largely be considered an additive combination of multiple sources, such as musical instruments or voice. If the musical sources are pitched instruments, the spectra they produce are predominantly harmonic, and are thus well suited to an additive sinusoidal model. However, due to resolution limits inherent in time-frequency analyses, when the harmonics of multiple sources occupy equivalent time-frequency regions, their individual properties are additively combined in the time-frequency representation of the mixed signal. Any such time-frequency point in a mixture where multiple harmonics overlap produces a single observation from which the contributions owed to each of the individual harmonics cannot be trivially deduced. These overlaps are referred to as overlapping partials or harmonic collisions. If one wishes to infer some information about individual sources in music mixtures, the information carried in regions where collided harmonics exist becomes unreliable due to interference from other sources. This interference has ramifications in a variety of music signal processing applications such as multiple fundamental frequency estimation, source separation, and instrumentation identification. This thesis addresses harmonic collisions in music signal processing applications. As a solution to the harmonic collision problem, a class of signal subspace-based high-resolution sinusoidal parameter estimators is explored. Specifically, the direct matrix pencil method, or equivalently, the Estimation of Signal Parameters via Rotational Invariance Techniques (ESPRIT) method, is used with the goal of producing estimates of the salient parameters of individual harmonics that occupy equivalent time-frequency regions. This estimation method is adapted here to be applicable to time-varying signals such as musical audio. While high-resolution methods have been previously explored in the context of music signal processing, previous work has not addressed whether or not such methods truly produce high-resolution sinusoidal parameter estimates in real-world music audio signals. Therefore, this thesis answers the question of whether high-resolution sinusoidal parameter estimators are really high-resolution for real music signals. This work directly explores the capabilities of this form of sinusoidal parameter estimation to resolve collided harmonics. The capabilities of this analysis method are also explored in the context of music signal processing applications. Potential benefits of high-resolution sinusoidal analysis are examined in experiments involving multiple fundamental frequency estimation and audio source separation. This work shows that there are indeed benefits to high-resolution sinusoidal analysis in music signal processing applications, especially when compared to methods that produce sinusoidal parameter estimates based on more traditional time-frequency representations. The benefits of this form of sinusoidal analysis are made most evident in multiple fundamental frequency estimation applications, where substantial performance gains are seen. High-resolution analysis in the context of computational auditory scene analysis-based source separation shows similar performance to existing comparable methods

    Application of sound source separation methods to advanced spatial audio systems

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    This thesis is related to the field of Sound Source Separation (SSS). It addresses the development and evaluation of these techniques for their application in the resynthesis of high-realism sound scenes by means of Wave Field Synthesis (WFS). Because the vast majority of audio recordings are preserved in twochannel stereo format, special up-converters are required to use advanced spatial audio reproduction formats, such as WFS. This is due to the fact that WFS needs the original source signals to be available, in order to accurately synthesize the acoustic field inside an extended listening area. Thus, an object-based mixing is required. Source separation problems in digital signal processing are those in which several signals have been mixed together and the objective is to find out what the original signals were. Therefore, SSS algorithms can be applied to existing two-channel mixtures to extract the different objects that compose the stereo scene. Unfortunately, most stereo mixtures are underdetermined, i.e., there are more sound sources than audio channels. This condition makes the SSS problem especially difficult and stronger assumptions have to be taken, often related to the sparsity of the sources under some signal transformation. This thesis is focused on the application of SSS techniques to the spatial sound reproduction field. As a result, its contributions can be categorized within these two areas. First, two underdetermined SSS methods are proposed to deal efficiently with the separation of stereo sound mixtures. These techniques are based on a multi-level thresholding segmentation approach, which enables to perform a fast and unsupervised separation of sound sources in the time-frequency domain. Although both techniques rely on the same clustering type, the features considered by each of them are related to different localization cues that enable to perform separation of either instantaneous or real mixtures.Additionally, two post-processing techniques aimed at improving the isolation of the separated sources are proposed. The performance achieved by several SSS methods in the resynthesis of WFS sound scenes is afterwards evaluated by means of listening tests, paying special attention to the change observed in the perceived spatial attributes. Although the estimated sources are distorted versions of the original ones, the masking effects involved in their spatial remixing make artifacts less perceptible, which improves the overall assessed quality. Finally, some novel developments related to the application of time-frequency processing to source localization and enhanced sound reproduction are presented.Cobos Serrano, M. (2009). Application of sound source separation methods to advanced spatial audio systems [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/8969Palanci
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