2,060 research outputs found
Blind MultiChannel Identification and Equalization for Dereverberation and Noise Reduction based on Convolutive Transfer Function
This paper addresses the problems of blind channel identification and
multichannel equalization for speech dereverberation and noise reduction. The
time-domain cross-relation method is not suitable for blind room impulse
response identification, due to the near-common zeros of the long impulse
responses. We extend the cross-relation method to the short-time Fourier
transform (STFT) domain, in which the time-domain impulse responses are
approximately represented by the convolutive transfer functions (CTFs) with
much less coefficients. The CTFs suffer from the common zeros caused by the
oversampled STFT. We propose to identify CTFs based on the STFT with the
oversampled signals and the critical sampled CTFs, which is a good compromise
between the frequency aliasing of the signals and the common zeros problem of
CTFs. In addition, a normalization of the CTFs is proposed to remove the gain
ambiguity across sub-bands. In the STFT domain, the identified CTFs is used for
multichannel equalization, in which the sparsity of speech signals is
exploited. We propose to perform inverse filtering by minimizing the
-norm of the source signal with the relaxed -norm fitting error
between the micophone signals and the convolution of the estimated source
signal and the CTFs used as a constraint. This method is advantageous in that
the noise can be reduced by relaxing the -norm to a tolerance
corresponding to the noise power, and the tolerance can be automatically set.
The experiments confirm the efficiency of the proposed method even under
conditions with high reverberation levels and intense noise.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 5 table
Adaptive signal processing algorithms for noncircular complex data
The complex domain provides a natural processing framework for a large class of signals
encountered in communications, radar, biomedical engineering and renewable
energy. Statistical signal processing in C has traditionally been viewed as a straightforward
extension of the corresponding algorithms in the real domain R, however,
recent developments in augmented complex statistics show that, in general, this leads
to under-modelling. This direct treatment of complex-valued signals has led to advances
in so called widely linear modelling and the introduction of a generalised
framework for the differentiability of both analytic and non-analytic complex and
quaternion functions. In this thesis, supervised and blind complex adaptive algorithms
capable of processing the generality of complex and quaternion signals (both
circular and noncircular) in both noise-free and noisy environments are developed;
their usefulness in real-world applications is demonstrated through case studies.
The focus of this thesis is on the use of augmented statistics and widely linear modelling.
The standard complex least mean square (CLMS) algorithm is extended to
perform optimally for the generality of complex-valued signals, and is shown to outperform
the CLMS algorithm. Next, extraction of latent complex-valued signals from
large mixtures is addressed. This is achieved by developing several classes of complex
blind source extraction algorithms based on fundamental signal properties such
as smoothness, predictability and degree of Gaussianity, with the analysis of the existence
and uniqueness of the solutions also provided. These algorithms are shown
to facilitate real-time applications, such as those in brain computer interfacing (BCI).
Due to their modified cost functions and the widely linear mixing model, this class of
algorithms perform well in both noise-free and noisy environments. Next, based on a
widely linear quaternion model, the FastICA algorithm is extended to the quaternion
domain to provide separation of the generality of quaternion signals. The enhanced
performances of the widely linear algorithms are illustrated in renewable energy and
biomedical applications, in particular, for the prediction of wind profiles and extraction
of artifacts from EEG recordings
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