323 research outputs found

    HMM-Based Speech Enhancement Using Sub-Word Models and Noise Adaptation

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    This work proposes a method of speech enhancement that uses a network of HMMs to first decode noisy speech and to then synthesise a set of features that enables a clean speech signal to be reconstructed. Different choices of acoustic model (whole-word, monophone and triphone) and grammars (highly constrained to no constraints) are considered and the effects of introducing or relaxing acoustic and grammar constraints investigated. For robust operation in noisy conditions it is necessary for the HMMs to model noisy speech and consequently noise adaptation is investigated along with its effect on the reconstructed speech. Speech quality and intelligibility analysis find triphone models with no grammar, combined with noise adaptation, gives highest performance that outperforms conventional methods of enhancement at low signal-to-noise ratios

    Reconstruction-based speech enhancement from robust acoustic features

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    This paper proposes a method of speech enhancement where a clean speech signal is reconstructed from a sinusoidal model of speech production and a set of acoustic speech features. The acoustic features are estimated from noisy speech and comprise, for each frame, a voicing classification (voiced, unvoiced or non-speech), fundamental frequency (for voiced frames) and spectral envelope. Rather than using different algorithms to estimate each parameter, a single statistical model is developed. This comprises a set of acoustic models and has similarity to the acoustic modelling used in speech recognition. This allows noise and speaker adaptation to be applied to acoustic feature estimation to improve robustness. Objective and subjective tests compare reconstruction-based enhancement with other methods of enhancement and show the proposed method to be highly effective at removing noise

    A Study on how Pre-whitening Influences Fundamental Frequency Estimation

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    The Application of Nonlinear Spectral Subtraction Method on Millimeter Wave Conducted Speech Enhancement

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    A nonlinear multiband spectral subtraction method is investigated in this study to reduce the colored electronic noise in millimeter wave (MMW) radar conducted speech. Because the over-subtraction factor of each Bark frequency band can be adaptively adjusted, the nonuniform effects of colored noise in the spectrum of the MMW radar speech can be taken into account in the enhancement process. Both the results of the time-frequency distribution analysis and perceptual evaluation test suggest that a better whole-frequency noise reduction effect is obtained, and the perceptually annoying musical noise was efficiently reduced, with little distortion to speech information as compared to the other standard speech enhancement algorithm

    Likelihood-Maximizing-Based Multiband Spectral Subtraction for Robust Speech Recognition

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    Automatic speech recognition performance degrades significantly when speech is affected by environmental noise. Nowadays, the major challenge is to achieve good robustness in adverse noisy conditions so that automatic speech recognizers can be used in real situations. Spectral subtraction (SS) is a well-known and effective approach; it was originally designed for improving the quality of speech signal judged by human listeners. SS techniques usually improve the quality and intelligibility of speech signal while speech recognition systems need compensation techniques to reduce mismatch between noisy speech features and clean trained acoustic model. Nevertheless, correlation can be expected between speech quality improvement and the increase in recognition accuracy. This paper proposes a novel approach for solving this problem by considering SS and the speech recognizer not as two independent entities cascaded together, but rather as two interconnected components of a single system, sharing the common goal of improved speech recognition accuracy. This will incorporate important information of the statistical models of the recognition engine as a feedback for tuning SS parameters. By using this architecture, we overcome the drawbacks of previously proposed methods and achieve better recognition accuracy. Experimental evaluations show that the proposed method can achieve significant improvement of recognition rates across a wide range of signal to noise ratios

    Pre-processing of Speech Signals for Robust Parameter Estimation

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    Model-Based Speech Enhancement

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    Abstract A method of speech enhancement is developed that reconstructs clean speech from a set of acoustic features using a harmonic plus noise model of speech. This is a significant departure from traditional filtering-based methods of speech enhancement. A major challenge with this approach is to estimate accurately the acoustic features (voicing, fundamental frequency, spectral envelope and phase) from noisy speech. This is achieved using maximum a-posteriori (MAP) estimation methods that operate on the noisy speech. In each case a prior model of the relationship between the noisy speech features and the estimated acoustic feature is required. These models are approximated using speaker-independent GMMs of the clean speech features that are adapted to speaker-dependent models using MAP adaptation and for noise using the Unscented Transform. Objective results are presented to optimise the proposed system and a set of subjective tests compare the approach with traditional enhancement methods. Threeway listening tests examining signal quality, background noise intrusiveness and overall quality show the proposed system to be highly robust to noise, performing significantly better than conventional methods of enhancement in terms of background noise intrusiveness. However, the proposed method is shown to reduce signal quality, with overall quality measured to be roughly equivalent to that of the Wiener filter

    An Indirect Speech Enhancement Framework Through Intermediate Noisy Speech Targets

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    Noise presents a severe challenge in speech communication and processing systems. Speech enhancement aims at removing the inference and restoring speech quality. It is an essential step in a speech processing pipeline in many modern electronic devices, such as mobile phones and smart speakers. Traditionally, speech engineers have relied on signal processing techniques, such as spectral subtraction or Wiener filtering. Since the advent of deep learning, data-driven methods have offered an alternative solution to speech enhancement. Researchers and engineers have proposed various neural network architectures to map noisy speech features into clean ones. In this thesis, we refer to this class of mapping based data-driven techniques collectively as a direct method in speech enhancement. The output speech from direct mapping methods usually contains noise residue and unpleasant distortion if the speech power is low relative to the noise power or the background noise is very complex. The former adverse condition refers to low signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR). The latter condition implies difficult noise types. Researchers have proposed improving the SNR of speech signal incrementally during enhancement to overcome such difficulty, known as SNR-progressive speech enhancement. This design breaks down the problem of direct mapping into manageable sub-tasks. Inspired by the previous work, we propose to adopt a multi-stage indirect approach to speech enhancement in challenging noise conditions. Unlike SNR-progressive speech enhancement, we gradually transform noisy speech from difficult background noise to speech in simple noise types. The thesis's focus will include the characterization of background noise, speech transformation techniques, and integration of an indirect speech enhancement system.Ph.D

    Speech Modeling and Robust Estimation for Diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease

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