181 research outputs found

    Bayesian Speaker Adaptation Based on a New Hierarchical Probabilistic Model

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    In this paper, a new hierarchical Bayesian speaker adaptation method called HMAP is proposed that combines the advantages of three conventional algorithms, maximum a posteriori (MAP), maximum-likelihood linear regression (MLLR), and eigenvoice, resulting in excellent performance across a wide range of adaptation conditions. The new method efficiently utilizes intra-speaker and inter-speaker correlation information through modeling phone and speaker subspaces in a consistent hierarchical Bayesian way. The phone variations for a specific speaker are assumed to be located in a low-dimensional subspace. The phone coordinate, which is shared among different speakers, implicitly contains the intra-speaker correlation information. For a specific speaker, the phone variation, represented by speaker-dependent eigenphones, are concatenated into a supervector. The eigenphone supervector space is also a low dimensional speaker subspace, which contains inter-speaker correlation information. Using principal component analysis (PCA), a new hierarchical probabilistic model for the generation of the speech observations is obtained. Speaker adaptation based on the new hierarchical model is derived using the maximum a posteriori criterion in a top-down manner. Both batch adaptation and online adaptation schemes are proposed. With tuned parameters, the new method can handle varying amounts of adaptation data automatically and efficiently. Experimental results on a Mandarin Chinese continuous speech recognition task show good performance under all testing conditions

    Adaptive speaker diarization of broadcast news based on factor analysis

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    The introduction of factor analysis techniques in a speaker diarization system enhances its performance by facilitating the use of speaker specific information, by improving the suppression of nuisance factors such as phonetic content, and by facilitating various forms of adaptation. This paper describes a state-of-the-art iVector-based diarization system which employs factor analysis and adaptation on all levels. The diarization modules relevant for this work are: the speaker segmentation which searches for speaker boundaries and the speaker clustering which aims at grouping speech segments of the same speaker. The speaker segmentation relies on speaker factors which are extracted on a frame-by-frame basis using eigenvoices. We incorporate soft voice activity detection in this extraction process as the speaker change detection should be based on speaker information only and we want it to disregard the non-speech frames by applying speech posteriors. Potential speaker boundaries are inserted at positions where rapid changes in speaker factors are witnessed. By employing Mahalanobis distances, the effect of the phonetic content can be further reduced, which results in more accurate speaker boundaries. This iVector-based segmentation significantly outperforms more common segmentation methods based on the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) or speech activity marks. The speaker clustering employs two-step Agglomerative Hierarchical Clustering (AHC): after initial BIC clustering, the second cluster stage is realized by either an iVector Probabilistic Linear Discriminant Analysis (PLDA) system or Cosine Distance Scoring (CDS) of extracted speaker factors. The segmentation system is made adaptive on a file-by-file basis by iterating the diarization process using eigenvoice matrices adapted (unsupervised) on the output of the previous iteration. Assuming that for most use cases material similar to the recording in question is readily available, unsupervised domain adaptation of the speaker clustering is possible as well. We obtain this by expanding the eigenvoice matrix used during speaker factor extraction for the CDS clustering stage with a small set of new eigenvoices that, in combination with the initial generic eigenvoices, models the recurring speakers and acoustic conditions more accurately. Experiments on the COST278 multilingual broadcast news database show the generation of significantly more accurate speaker boundaries by using adaptive speaker segmentation which also results in more accurate clustering. The obtained speaker error rate (SER) can be further reduced by another 13% relative to 7.4% via domain adaptation of the CDS clustering. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Cross likelihood ratio based speaker clustering using eigenvoice models

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    This paper proposes the use of eigenvoice modeling techniques with the Cross Likelihood Ratio (CLR) as a criterion for speaker clustering within a speaker diarization system. The CLR has previously been shown to be a robust decision criterion for speaker clustering using Gaussian Mixture Models. Recently, eigenvoice modeling techniques have become increasingly popular, due to its ability to adequately represent a speaker based on sparse training data, as well as an improved capture of differences in speaker characteristics. This paper hence proposes that it would be beneficial to capitalize on the advantages of eigenvoice modeling in a CLR framework. Results obtained on the 2002 Rich Transcription (RT-02) Evaluation dataset show an improved clustering performance, resulting in a 35.1% relative improvement in the overall Diarization Error Rate (DER) compared to the baseline system

    Speaker recognition by means of restricted Boltzmann machine adaptation

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    Restricted Boltzmann Machines (RBMs) have shown success in speaker recognition. In this paper, RBMs are investigated in a framework comprising a universal model training and model adaptation. Taking advantage of RBM unsupervised learning algorithm, a global model is trained based on all available background data. This general speaker-independent model, referred to as URBM, is further adapted to the data of a specific speaker to build speaker-dependent model. In order to show its effectiveness, we have applied this framework to two different tasks. It has been used to discriminatively model target and impostor spectral features for classification. It has been also utilized to produce a vector-based representation for speakers. This vector-based representation, similar to i-vector, can be further used for speaker recognition using either cosine scoring or Probabilistic Linear Discriminant Analysis (PLDA). The evaluation is performed on the core test condition of the NIST SRE 2006 database.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Using contextual information in Joint Factor Eigenspace MLLR for speech recognition in diverse scenarios

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    This paper presents a new approach for rapid adaptation in the presence of highly diverse scenarios that takes advantage of information describing the input signals. We introduce a new method for joint factorisation of the background and the speaker in an eigenspace MLLR framework: Joint Factor Eigenspace MLLR (JFEMLLR). We further propose to use contextual information describing the speaker and background, such as tags or more complex metadata, to provide an immediate estimation of the best MLLR transformation for the utterance. This provides instant adaptation, since it does not require any transcription from a previous decoding stage. Evaluation in a highly diverse Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) task, a modified version of WSJCAM0, yields an improvement of 26.9% over the baseline, which is an extra 1.2% reduction over two-pass MLLR adaptation

    From features to speaker vectors by means of restricted Boltzmann machine adaptation

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    Restricted Boltzmann Machines (RBMs) have shown success in different stages of speaker recognition systems. In this paper, we propose a novel framework to produce a vector-based representation for each speaker, which will be referred to as RBM-vector. This new approach maps the speaker spectral features to a single fixed-dimensional vector carrying speaker-specific information. In this work, a global model, referred to as Universal RBM (URBM), is trained taking advantage of RBM unsupervised learning capabilities. Then, this URBM is adapted to the data of each speaker in the development, enrolment and evaluation datasets. The network connection weights of the adapted RBMs are further concatenated and subject to a whitening with dimension reduction stage to build the speaker vectors. The evaluation is performed on the core test condition of the NIST SRE 2006 database, and it is shown that RBM-vectors achieve 15% relative improvement in terms of EER compared to i-vectors using cosine scoring. The score fusion with i-vector attains more than 24% relative improvement. The interest of this result for score fusion yields on the fact that both vectors are produced in an unsupervised fashion and can be used instead of i-vector/PLDA approach, when no data label is available. Results obtained for RBM-vector/PLDA framework is comparable with the ones from i-vector/PLDA. Their score fusion achieves 14% relative improvement compared to i-vector/PLDA.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Adaptation of Hybrid ANN/HMM Models using Linear Hidden Transformations and Conservative Training

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    International audienceA technique is proposed for the adaptation of automatic speech recognition systems using Hybrid models combining Artificial Neural Networks with Hidden Markov Models. The application of linear transformations not only to the input features, but also to the outputs of the internal layers is investigated. The motivation is that the outputs of an internal layer represent a projection of the input pattern into a space where it should be easier to learn the classification or transformation expected at the output of the network. A new solution, called Conservative Training, is proposed that compensates for the lack of adaptation samples in certain classes. Supervised adaptation experiments with different corpora and for different adaptation types are described. The results show that the proposed approach always outperforms the use of transformations in the feature space and yields even better results when combined with linear input transformations
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