642 research outputs found

    Feature selection in pathological voice classification using dinamyc of component analysis

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    This paper presents a methodology for the reduction of the training space based on the analysis of the variation of the linear components of the acoustic features. The methodology is applied to the automatic detection of voice disorders by means of stochastic dynamic models. The acoustic features used to model the speech are: MFCC, HNR, GNE, NNE and the energy envelopes. The feature extraction is carried out by means of PCA, and classification is done using discrete and continuous HMMs. The results showed a direct relationship between the principal directions (feature weights) and the classification performance. The dynamic feature analysis by means of PCA reduces the dimension of the original feature space while the topological complexity of the dynamic classifier remains unchanged. The experiments were tested with Kay Elemetrics (DB1) and UPM (DB2) databases. Results showed 91% of accuracy with 30% of computational cost reduction for DB1

    Intra- and Inter-database Study for Arabic, English, and German Databases:Do Conventional Speech Features Detect Voice Pathology?

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    A large population around the world has voice complications. Various approaches for subjective and objective evaluations have been suggested in the literature. The subjective approach strongly depends on the experience and area of expertise of a clinician, and human error cannot be neglected. On the other hand, the objective or automatic approach is noninvasive. Automatic developed systems can provide complementary information that may be helpful for a clinician in the early screening of a voice disorder. At the same time, automatic systems can be deployed in remote areas where a general practitioner can use them and may refer the patient to a specialist to avoid complications that may be life threatening. Many automatic systems for disorder detection have been developed by applying different types of conventional speech features such as the linear prediction coefficients, linear prediction cepstral coefficients, and Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs). This study aims to ascertain whether conventional speech features detect voice pathology reliably, and whether they can be correlated with voice quality. To investigate this, an automatic detection system based on MFCC was developed, and three different voice disorder databases were used in this study. The experimental results suggest that the accuracy of the MFCC-based system varies from database to database. The detection rate for the intra-database ranges from 72% to 95%, and that for the inter-database is from 47% to 82%. The results conclude that conventional speech features are not correlated with voice, and hence are not reliable in pathology detection

    Review of Research on Speech Technology: Main Contributions From Spanish Research Groups

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    In the last two decades, there has been an important increase in research on speech technology in Spain, mainly due to a higher level of funding from European, Spanish and local institutions and also due to a growing interest in these technologies for developing new services and applications. This paper provides a review of the main areas of speech technology addressed by research groups in Spain, their main contributions in the recent years and the main focus of interest these days. This description is classified in five main areas: audio processing including speech, speaker characterization, speech and language processing, text to speech conversion and spoken language applications. This paper also introduces the Spanish Network of Speech Technologies (RTTH. Red Temática en Tecnologías del Habla) as the research network that includes almost all the researchers working in this area, presenting some figures, its objectives and its main activities developed in the last years

    Analysis and Detection of Pathological Voice using Glottal Source Features

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    Automatic detection of voice pathology enables objective assessment and earlier intervention for the diagnosis. This study provides a systematic analysis of glottal source features and investigates their effectiveness in voice pathology detection. Glottal source features are extracted using glottal flows estimated with the quasi-closed phase (QCP) glottal inverse filtering method, using approximate glottal source signals computed with the zero frequency filtering (ZFF) method, and using acoustic voice signals directly. In addition, we propose to derive mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs) from the glottal source waveforms computed by QCP and ZFF to effectively capture the variations in glottal source spectra of pathological voice. Experiments were carried out using two databases, the Hospital Universitario Principe de Asturias (HUPA) database and the Saarbrucken Voice Disorders (SVD) database. Analysis of features revealed that the glottal source contains information that discriminates normal and pathological voice. Pathology detection experiments were carried out using support vector machine (SVM). From the detection experiments it was observed that the performance achieved with the studied glottal source features is comparable or better than that of conventional MFCCs and perceptual linear prediction (PLP) features. The best detection performance was achieved when the glottal source features were combined with the conventional MFCCs and PLP features, which indicates the complementary nature of the features

    Detección automática de voz hipernasal de niños con labio y paladar hendido a partir de vocales y palabras del español usando medidas clásicas y análisis no lineal

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    RESUMEN: Este artículo presenta un sistema para la detección automática de señales de voz hipernasales basado en la combinación de dos diferentes esquemas de caracterización aplicados en las cinco vocales del español y dos palabras seleccionadas. El primer esquema está basado en características clásicas como perturbaciones del periodo fundamental, medidas de ruido y coeficientes cepstrales en la frecuencia de Mel. El segundo enfoque está basado en medidas de dinámica no lineal. Las características más relevantes son seleccionadas usando dos técnicas: análisis de componentes principales y selección flotante hacia adelante secuencial. La decisión acerca de si un registro de voz es hipernasal o sano es tomada usando una máquina de soporte vectorial de margen suave. Los experimentos consideran grabaciones de las cinco vocales del idioma español y las palabras y se consideran, asimismo, tres conjuntos de características: (1) el enfoque clásico, (2) el análisis de dinámica no lineal y (3) la combinación de ambos esquemas. En general, los aciertos son mayores y más estables cuando las características clásicas y no lineales son combinadas, indicando que el análisis de dinámica no lineal se complementa con el esquema clásico.ABSTRACT: This paper presents a system for the automatic detection of hypernasal speech signals based on the combination of two different characterization approaches applied to the five spanish vowels and two selected words. The first approach is based on classical features such as pitch period perturbations, noise measures, and Mel-Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC). The second approach is based on the Non-Linear Dynamics (NLD) analysis. The most relevant features are selected and sorted using two techniques: Principal Components Analysis (PCA) and Sequential Forward Floating Selection (SFFS). The decision about whether a voice record is hypernasal or healthy is taken using a Soft Margin - Support Vector Machine (SM-SVM). Experiments upon recordings of the five Spanish vowels and the words are performed considering three different set of features: (1) the classical approach, (2) the NLD analysis, and (3) the combination of the classical and NLD measures. In general, the accuracies are higher and more stable when the classical and NLD features are combined, indicating that the NLD analysis is complementary to the classical approach

    Discriminative features for GMM and i-vector based speaker diarization

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    Speaker diarization has received several research attentions over the last decade. Among the different domains of speaker diarization, diarization in meeting domain is the most challenging one. It usually contains spontaneous speech and is, for example, susceptible to reverberation. The appropriate selection of speech features is one of the factors that affect the performance of speaker diarization systems. Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC) are the most widely used short-term speech features in speaker diarization. Other factors that affect the performance of speaker diarization systems are the techniques employed to perform both speaker segmentation and speaker clustering. In this thesis, we have proposed the use of jitter and shimmer long-term voice-quality features both for Gaussian Mixture Modeling (GMM) and i-vector based speaker diarization systems. The voice-quality features are used together with the state-of-the-art short-term cepstral and long-term speech ones. The long-term features consist of prosody and Glottal-to-Noise excitation ratio (GNE) descriptors. Firstly, the voice-quality, prosodic and GNE features are stacked in the same feature vector. Then, they are fused with cepstral coefficients at the score likelihood level both for the proposed Gaussian Mixture Modeling (GMM) and i-vector based speaker diarization systems. For the proposed GMM based speaker diarization system, independent HMM models are estimated from the short-term and long-term speech feature sets. The fusion of the short-term descriptors with the long-term ones in speaker segmentation is carried out by linearly weighting the log-likelihood scores of Viterbi decoding. In the case of speaker clustering, the fusion of the short-term cepstral features with the long-term ones is carried out by linearly fusing the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) scores corresponding to these feature sets. For the proposed i-vector based speaker diarization system, the speaker segmentation is carried out exactly the same as in the previously mentioned GMM based speaker diarization system. However, the speaker clustering technique is based on the recently introduced factor analysis paradigm. Two set of i-vectors are extracted from the speaker segmentation hypothesis. Whilst the first i-vector is extracted from short-term cepstral features, the second one is extracted from the voice quality, prosody and GNE descriptors. Then, the cosine-distance and Probabilistic Linear Discriminant Analysis (PLDA) scores of i-vectors are linearly weighted to obtain a fused similarity score. Finally, the fused score is used as speaker clustering distance. We have also proposed the use of delta dynamic features for speaker clustering. The motivation for using deltas in clustering is that delta dynamic features capture the transitional characteristics of the speech signal which contain speaker specific information. This information is not captured by the static cepstral coefficients. The delta features are used together with the short-term static cepstral coefficients and long-term speech features (i.e., voice-quality, prosody and GNE) both for GMM and i-vector based speaker diarization systems. The experiments have been carried out on Augmented Multi-party Interaction (AMI) meeting corpus. The experimental results show that the use of voice-quality, prosody, GNE and delta dynamic features improve the performance of both GMM and i-vector based speaker diarization systems.La diarización del altavoz ha recibido varias atenciones de investigación durante la última década. Entre los diferentes dominios de la diarización del hablante, la diarización en el dominio del encuentro es la más difícil. Normalmente contiene habla espontánea y, por ejemplo, es susceptible de reverberación. La selección apropiada de las características del habla es uno de los factores que afectan el rendimiento de los sistemas de diarización de los altavoces. Los Coeficientes Cepstral de Frecuencia Mel (MFCC) son las características de habla de corto plazo más utilizadas en la diarización de los altavoces. Otros factores que afectan el rendimiento de los sistemas de diarización del altavoz son las técnicas empleadas para realizar tanto la segmentación del altavoz como el agrupamiento de altavoces. En esta tesis, hemos propuesto el uso de jitter y shimmer características de calidad de voz a largo plazo tanto para GMM y i-vector basada en sistemas de diarización de altavoces. Las características de calidad de voz se utilizan junto con el estado de la técnica a corto plazo cepstral y de larga duración de habla. Las características a largo plazo consisten en la prosodia y los descriptores de relación de excitación Glottal-a-Ruido (GNE). En primer lugar, las características de calidad de voz, prosódica y GNE se apilan en el mismo vector de características. A continuación, se fusionan con coeficientes cepstrales en el nivel de verosimilitud de puntajes tanto para los sistemas de diarización de altavoces basados ¿¿en el modelo Gaussian Mixture Modeling (GMM) como en los sistemas basados ¿¿en i-vector. . Para el sistema de diarización de altavoces basado en GMM propuesto, se calculan modelos HMM independientes a partir de cada conjunto de características. En la segmentación de los altavoces, la fusión de los descriptores a corto plazo con los de largo plazo se lleva a cabo mediante la ponderación lineal de las puntuaciones log-probabilidad de decodificación Viterbi. En la agrupación de altavoces, la fusión de las características cepstrales a corto plazo con las de largo plazo se lleva a cabo mediante la fusión lineal de las puntuaciones Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) correspondientes a estos conjuntos de características. Para el sistema de diarización de altavoces basado en un vector i, la fusión de características se realiza exactamente igual a la del sistema basado en GMM antes mencionado. Sin embargo, la técnica de agrupación de altavoces se basa en el paradigma de análisis de factores recientemente introducido. Dos conjuntos de i-vectores se extraen de la hipótesis de segmentación de altavoz. Mientras que el primer vector i se extrae de características espectrales a corto plazo, el segundo se extrae de los descriptores de calidad de voz apilados, prosódicos y GNE. A continuación, las puntuaciones de coseno-distancia y Probabilistic Linear Discriminant Analysis (PLDA) entre i-vectores se ponderan linealmente para obtener una puntuación de similitud fundida. Finalmente, la puntuación fusionada se utiliza como distancia de agrupación de altavoces. También hemos propuesto el uso de características dinámicas delta para la agrupación de locutores. La motivación para el uso de deltas en la agrupación es que las características dinámicas delta capturan las características de transición de la señal de voz que contienen información específica del locutor. Esta información no es capturada por los coeficientes cepstrales estáticos. Las características delta se usan junto con los coeficientes cepstrales estáticos a corto plazo y las características de voz a largo plazo (es decir, calidad de voz, prosodia y GNE) tanto para sistemas de diarización de altavoces basados en GMM como en sistemas i-vector. Los resultados experimentales sobre AMI muestran que el uso de calidad vocal, prosódica, GNE y dinámicas delta mejoran el rendimiento de los sistemas de diarización de altavoces basados en GMM e i-vector.Postprint (published version

    A zero-watermarking algorithm for privacy protection in biomedical signals

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    Confidentiality of health information is indispensable to protect privacy of an individual. However, recent advances in electronic healthcare systems allow transmission of sensitive information through the Internet, which is prone to various vulnerabilities, attacks and may leads to unauthorized disclosure. Such situations may not only create adverse effects for individuals but may also cause severe consequences such as hefty regulatory fines, bad publicity, legal fees, and forensics. To avoid such predicaments, a privacy protected healthcare system is proposed in this study that protects the identity of an individual as well as detects vocal fold disorders. The privacy of the developed healthcare system is based on the proposed zero-watermarking algorithm, which embeds a watermark in a secret key instead of the signals to avoid the distortion in an audio sample. The identity is protected by the generation of its secret shares through visual cryptography. The generated shares are embedded by finding the patterns into the audio with the application of one-dimensional local binary pattern. The proposed zero-watermarking algorithm is evaluated by using audio samples taken from the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary voice disorder database. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed algorithm achieves imperceptibility and is reliable in its extraction of identity. In addition, the proposed algorithm does not affect the results of disorder detection and it is robust against noise attacks of various signal-to-noise ratios

    Making speech technology accessible for pathological speakers

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