2,394 research outputs found

    Audio Analysis/synthesis System

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    A method and apparatus for the automatic analysis, synthesis and modification of audio signals, based on an overlap-add sinusoidal model, is disclosed. Automatic analysis of amplitude, frequency and phase parameters of the model is achieved using an analysis-by-synthesis procedure which incorporates successive approximation, yielding synthetic waveforms which are very good approximations to the original waveforms and are perceptually identical to the original sounds. A generalized overlap-add sinusoidal model is introduced which can modify audio signals without objectionable artifacts. In addition, a new approach to pitch-scale modification allows for the use of arbitrary spectral envelope estimates and addresses the problems of high-frequency loss and noise amplification encountered with prior art methods. The overlap-add synthesis method provides the ability to synthesize sounds with computational efficiency rivaling that of synthesis using the discrete short-time Fourier transform (DSTFT) while eliminating the modification artifacts associated with that method.Georgia Tech Research Corporatio

    Reconstructing intelligible audio speech from visual speech features

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    This work describes an investigation into the feasibility of producing intelligible audio speech from only visual speech fea- tures. The proposed method aims to estimate a spectral enve- lope from visual features which is then combined with an arti- ficial excitation signal and used within a model of speech pro- duction to reconstruct an audio signal. Different combinations of audio and visual features are considered, along with both a statistical method of estimation and a deep neural network. The intelligibility of the reconstructed audio speech is measured by human listeners, and then compared to the intelligibility of the video signal only and when combined with the reconstructed audio

    Wavenet based low rate speech coding

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    Traditional parametric coding of speech facilitates low rate but provides poor reconstruction quality because of the inadequacy of the model used. We describe how a WaveNet generative speech model can be used to generate high quality speech from the bit stream of a standard parametric coder operating at 2.4 kb/s. We compare this parametric coder with a waveform coder based on the same generative model and show that approximating the signal waveform incurs a large rate penalty. Our experiments confirm the high performance of the WaveNet based coder and show that the speech produced by the system is able to additionally perform implicit bandwidth extension and does not significantly impair recognition of the original speaker for the human listener, even when that speaker has not been used during the training of the generative model.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Frame Theory for Signal Processing in Psychoacoustics

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    This review chapter aims to strengthen the link between frame theory and signal processing tasks in psychoacoustics. On the one side, the basic concepts of frame theory are presented and some proofs are provided to explain those concepts in some detail. The goal is to reveal to hearing scientists how this mathematical theory could be relevant for their research. In particular, we focus on frame theory in a filter bank approach, which is probably the most relevant view-point for audio signal processing. On the other side, basic psychoacoustic concepts are presented to stimulate mathematicians to apply their knowledge in this field

    Scalable and perceptual audio compression

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    This thesis deals with scalable perceptual audio compression. Two scalable perceptual solutions as well as a scalable to lossless solution are proposed and investigated. One of the scalable perceptual solutions is built around sinusoidal modelling of the audio signal whilst the other is built on a transform coding paradigm. The scalable coders are shown to scale both in a waveform matching manner as well as a psychoacoustic manner. In order to measure the psychoacoustic scalability of the systems investigated in this thesis, the similarity between the original signal\u27s psychoacoustic parameters and that of the synthesized signal are compared. The psychoacoustic parameters used are loudness, sharpness, tonahty and roughness. This analysis technique is a novel method used in this thesis and it allows an insight into the perceptual distortion that has been introduced by any coder analyzed in this manner

    A Comparison Between STRAIGHT, Glottal, an Sinusoidal Vocoding in Statistical Parametric Speech Synthesis

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    Speech is a fundamental method of human communication that allows conveying information between people. Even though the linguistic content is commonly regarded as the main information in speech, the signal contains a richness of other information, such as prosodic cues that shape the intended meaning of a sentence. This information is largely generated by quasi-periodic glottal excitation, which is the acoustic speech excitation airflow originating from the lungs that makes the vocal folds oscillate in the production of voiced speech. By regulating the sub-glottal pressure and the tension of the vocal folds, humans learn to affect the characteristics of the glottal excitation in order to signal the emotional state of the speaker for example. Glottal inverse filtering (GIF) is an estimation method for the glottal excitation of a recorded speech signal. Various cues about the speech signal, such as the mode of phonation, can be detected and analyzed from an estimate of the glottal flow, both instantaneously and as a function of time. Aside from its use in fundamental speech research, such as phonetics, the recent advances in GIF and machine learning enable a wider variety of GIF applications, such as emotional speech synthesis and the detection of paralinguistic information. However, GIF is a difficult inverse problem where the target algorithm output is generally unattainable with direct measurements. Thus the algorithms and their evaluation need to rely on some prior assumptions about the properties of the speech signal. A common thread utilized in most of the studies in this thesis is the estimation of the vocal tract transfer function (the key problem in GIF) by temporally weighting the optimization criterion in GIF so that the effect of the main excitation peak is attenuated. This thesis studies GIF from various perspectives---including the development of two new GIF methods that improve GIF performance over the state-of-the-art methods---and furthers basic research in the automated estimation of glottal excitation. The estimation of the GIF-based vocal tract transfer function for formant tracking and perceptually weighted speech envelope estimation is also studied. The central speech technology application of GIF addressed in the thesis is the use of GIF-based spectral envelope models and glottal excitation waveforms as target training data for the generative neural network models used in statistical parametric speech synthesis. The obtained results show that even though the presented studies provide improvements to the previous methodology for all voice types, GIF-based speech processing continues to mainly benefit male voices in speech synthesis applications.Puhe on olennainen osa ihmistenvälistä informaation siirtoa. Vaikka kielellistä sisältöä pidetään yleisesti puheen tärkeimpänä ominaisuutena, puhesignaali sisältää myös runsaasti muuta informaatiota kuten prosodisia vihjeitä, jotka muokkaavat siirrettävän informaation merkitystä. Tämä informaatio tuotetaan suurilta osin näennäisjaksollisella glottisherätteellä, joka on puheen herätteenä toimiva akustinen virtaussignaali. Säätämällä äänihuulten alapuolista painetta ja äänihuulten kireyttä ihmiset muuttavat glottisherätteen ominaisuuksia viestittääkseen esimerkiksi tunnetilaa. Glottaalinen käänteissuodatus (GKS) on laskennallinen menetelmä glottisherätteen estimointiin nauhoitetusta puhesignaalista. Glottisherätteen perusteella puheen laadusta voidaan tunnistaa useita piirteitä kuten ääntötapa, sekä hetkellisesti että ajan funktiona. Puheen perustutkimuksen, kuten fonetiikan, lisäksi viimeaikaiset edistykset GKS:ssä ja koneoppimisessa ovat avaamassa mahdollisuuksia laajempaan GKS:n soveltamiseen puheteknologiassa, kuten puhesynteesissä ja puheen biopiirteistämisessä paralingvistisiä sovelluksia varten. Haasteena on kuitenkin se, että GKS on vaikea käänteisongelma, jossa todellista puhetta vastaavan glottisherätteen suora mittaus on mahdotonta. Tästä johtuen GKS:ssä käytettävien algoritmien kehitystyö ja arviointi perustuu etukäteisoletuksiin puhesignaalin ominaisuuksista. Tässä väitöskirjassa esitetyissä menetelmissä on yhteisenä oletuksena se, että ääntöväylän siirtofunktio voidaan arvioida (joka on GKS:n pääongelma) aikapainottamalla GKS:n optimointikriteeriä niin, että glottisherätteen pääeksitaatiopiikkin vaikutus vaimenee. Tässä väitöskirjassa GKS:ta tutkitaan useasta eri näkökulmasta, jotka sisältävät kaksi uutta GKS-menetelmää, jotka parantavat arviointituloksia aikaisempiin menetelmiin verrattuna, sekä perustutkimusta käänteissuodatusprosessin automatisointiin liittyen. Lisäksi GKS-pohjaista ääntöväylän siirtofunktiota käytetään formanttiestimoinnissa sekä kuulohavaintopainotettuna versiona puheen spektrin verhokäyrän arvioinnissa. Tämän väitöskirjan keskeisin puheteknologiasovellus on GKS-pohjaisten puheen spektrin verhokäyrämallien sekä glottisheräteaaltomuotojen käyttö kohdedatana neuroverkkomalleille tilastollisessa parametrisessa puhesynteesissä. Saatujen tulosten perusteella kehitetyt menetelmät parantavat GKS-pohjaisten menetelmien laatua kaikilla äänityypeillä, mutta puhesynteesisovelluksissa GKS-pohjaiset ratkaisut hyödyttävät edelleen lähinnä matalia miesääniä
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