54,099 research outputs found
Learning sound representations using trainable COPE feature extractors
Sound analysis research has mainly been focused on speech and music
processing. The deployed methodologies are not suitable for analysis of sounds
with varying background noise, in many cases with very low signal-to-noise
ratio (SNR). In this paper, we present a method for the detection of patterns
of interest in audio signals. We propose novel trainable feature extractors,
which we call COPE (Combination of Peaks of Energy). The structure of a COPE
feature extractor is determined using a single prototype sound pattern in an
automatic configuration process, which is a type of representation learning. We
construct a set of COPE feature extractors, configured on a number of training
patterns. Then we take their responses to build feature vectors that we use in
combination with a classifier to detect and classify patterns of interest in
audio signals. We carried out experiments on four public data sets: MIVIA audio
events, MIVIA road events, ESC-10 and TU Dortmund data sets. The results that
we achieved (recognition rate equal to 91.71% on the MIVIA audio events, 94% on
the MIVIA road events, 81.25% on the ESC-10 and 94.27% on the TU Dortmund)
demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method and are higher than the
ones obtained by other existing approaches. The COPE feature extractors have
high robustness to variations of SNR. Real-time performance is achieved even
when the value of a large number of features is computed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Pattern Recognitio
The Effect of Explicit Structure Encoding of Deep Neural Networks for Symbolic Music Generation
With recent breakthroughs in artificial neural networks, deep generative
models have become one of the leading techniques for computational creativity.
Despite very promising progress on image and short sequence generation,
symbolic music generation remains a challenging problem since the structure of
compositions are usually complicated. In this study, we attempt to solve the
melody generation problem constrained by the given chord progression. This
music meta-creation problem can also be incorporated into a plan recognition
system with user inputs and predictive structural outputs. In particular, we
explore the effect of explicit architectural encoding of musical structure via
comparing two sequential generative models: LSTM (a type of RNN) and WaveNet
(dilated temporal-CNN). As far as we know, this is the first study of applying
WaveNet to symbolic music generation, as well as the first systematic
comparison between temporal-CNN and RNN for music generation. We conduct a
survey for evaluation in our generations and implemented Variable Markov Oracle
in music pattern discovery. Experimental results show that to encode structure
more explicitly using a stack of dilated convolution layers improved the
performance significantly, and a global encoding of underlying chord
progression into the generation procedure gains even more.Comment: 8 pages, 13 figure
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