15,753 research outputs found
Prosodic-Enhanced Siamese Convolutional Neural Networks for Cross-Device Text-Independent Speaker Verification
In this paper a novel cross-device text-independent speaker verification
architecture is proposed. Majority of the state-of-the-art deep architectures
that are used for speaker verification tasks consider Mel-frequency cepstral
coefficients. In contrast, our proposed Siamese convolutional neural network
architecture uses Mel-frequency spectrogram coefficients to benefit from the
dependency of the adjacent spectro-temporal features. Moreover, although
spectro-temporal features have proved to be highly reliable in speaker
verification models, they only represent some aspects of short-term acoustic
level traits of the speaker's voice. However, the human voice consists of
several linguistic levels such as acoustic, lexicon, prosody, and phonetics,
that can be utilized in speaker verification models. To compensate for these
inherited shortcomings in spectro-temporal features, we propose to enhance the
proposed Siamese convolutional neural network architecture by deploying a
multilayer perceptron network to incorporate the prosodic, jitter, and shimmer
features. The proposed end-to-end verification architecture performs feature
extraction and verification simultaneously. This proposed architecture displays
significant improvement over classical signal processing approaches and deep
algorithms for forensic cross-device speaker verification.Comment: Accepted in 9th IEEE International Conference on Biometrics: Theory,
Applications, and Systems (BTAS 2018
Visual units and confusion modelling for automatic lip-reading
Automatic lip-reading (ALR) is a challenging task because the visual speech signal is known to be missing some important information, such as voicing. We propose an approach to ALR that acknowledges that this information is missing but assumes that it is substituted or deleted in a systematic way that can be modelled. We describe a system that learns such a model and then incorporates it into decoding, which is realised as a cascade of weighted finite-state transducers. Our results show a small but statistically significant improvement in recognition accuracy. We also investigate the issue of suitable visual units for ALR, and show that visemes are sub-optimal, not but because they introduce lexical ambiguity, but because the reduction in modelling units entailed by their use reduces accuracy
Integrated speech and morphological processing in a connectionist continuous speech understanding for Korean
A new tightly coupled speech and natural language integration model is
presented for a TDNN-based continuous possibly large vocabulary speech
recognition system for Korean. Unlike popular n-best techniques developed for
integrating mainly HMM-based speech recognition and natural language processing
in a {\em word level}, which is obviously inadequate for morphologically
complex agglutinative languages, our model constructs a spoken language system
based on a {\em morpheme-level} speech and language integration. With this
integration scheme, the spoken Korean processing engine (SKOPE) is designed and
implemented using a TDNN-based diphone recognition module integrated with a
Viterbi-based lexical decoding and symbolic phonological/morphological
co-analysis. Our experiment results show that the speaker-dependent continuous
{\em eojeol} (Korean word) recognition and integrated morphological analysis
can be achieved with over 80.6% success rate directly from speech inputs for
the middle-level vocabularies.Comment: latex source with a4 style, 15 pages, to be published in computer
processing of oriental language journa
Recognizing Speech in a Novel Accent: The Motor Theory of Speech Perception Reframed
The motor theory of speech perception holds that we perceive the speech of
another in terms of a motor representation of that speech. However, when we
have learned to recognize a foreign accent, it seems plausible that recognition
of a word rarely involves reconstruction of the speech gestures of the speaker
rather than the listener. To better assess the motor theory and this
observation, we proceed in three stages. Part 1 places the motor theory of
speech perception in a larger framework based on our earlier models of the
adaptive formation of mirror neurons for grasping, and for viewing extensions
of that mirror system as part of a larger system for neuro-linguistic
processing, augmented by the present consideration of recognizing speech in a
novel accent. Part 2 then offers a novel computational model of how a listener
comes to understand the speech of someone speaking the listener's native
language with a foreign accent. The core tenet of the model is that the
listener uses hypotheses about the word the speaker is currently uttering to
update probabilities linking the sound produced by the speaker to phonemes in
the native language repertoire of the listener. This, on average, improves the
recognition of later words. This model is neutral regarding the nature of the
representations it uses (motor vs. auditory). It serve as a reference point for
the discussion in Part 3, which proposes a dual-stream neuro-linguistic
architecture to revisits claims for and against the motor theory of speech
perception and the relevance of mirror neurons, and extracts some implications
for the reframing of the motor theory
An Unsupervised Autoregressive Model for Speech Representation Learning
This paper proposes a novel unsupervised autoregressive neural model for
learning generic speech representations. In contrast to other speech
representation learning methods that aim to remove noise or speaker
variabilities, ours is designed to preserve information for a wide range of
downstream tasks. In addition, the proposed model does not require any phonetic
or word boundary labels, allowing the model to benefit from large quantities of
unlabeled data. Speech representations learned by our model significantly
improve performance on both phone classification and speaker verification over
the surface features and other supervised and unsupervised approaches. Further
analysis shows that different levels of speech information are captured by our
model at different layers. In particular, the lower layers tend to be more
discriminative for speakers, while the upper layers provide more phonetic
content.Comment: Accepted to Interspeech 2019. Code available at:
https://github.com/iamyuanchung/Autoregressive-Predictive-Codin
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