6,448 research outputs found
Disentangled Speech Embeddings using Cross-modal Self-supervision
The objective of this paper is to learn representations of speaker identity
without access to manually annotated data. To do so, we develop a
self-supervised learning objective that exploits the natural cross-modal
synchrony between faces and audio in video. The key idea behind our approach is
to tease apart--without annotation--the representations of linguistic content
and speaker identity. We construct a two-stream architecture which: (1) shares
low-level features common to both representations; and (2) provides a natural
mechanism for explicitly disentangling these factors, offering the potential
for greater generalisation to novel combinations of content and identity and
ultimately producing speaker identity representations that are more robust. We
train our method on a large-scale audio-visual dataset of talking heads `in the
wild', and demonstrate its efficacy by evaluating the learned speaker
representations for standard speaker recognition performance.Comment: ICASSP 2020. The first three authors contributed equally to this wor
Learnable PINs: Cross-Modal Embeddings for Person Identity
We propose and investigate an identity sensitive joint embedding of face and
voice. Such an embedding enables cross-modal retrieval from voice to face and
from face to voice. We make the following four contributions: first, we show
that the embedding can be learnt from videos of talking faces, without
requiring any identity labels, using a form of cross-modal self-supervision;
second, we develop a curriculum learning schedule for hard negative mining
targeted to this task, that is essential for learning to proceed successfully;
third, we demonstrate and evaluate cross-modal retrieval for identities unseen
and unheard during training over a number of scenarios and establish a
benchmark for this novel task; finally, we show an application of using the
joint embedding for automatically retrieving and labelling characters in TV
dramas.Comment: To appear in ECCV 201
Multimodal Speech Emotion Recognition Using Audio and Text
Speech emotion recognition is a challenging task, and extensive reliance has
been placed on models that use audio features in building well-performing
classifiers. In this paper, we propose a novel deep dual recurrent encoder
model that utilizes text data and audio signals simultaneously to obtain a
better understanding of speech data. As emotional dialogue is composed of sound
and spoken content, our model encodes the information from audio and text
sequences using dual recurrent neural networks (RNNs) and then combines the
information from these sources to predict the emotion class. This architecture
analyzes speech data from the signal level to the language level, and it thus
utilizes the information within the data more comprehensively than models that
focus on audio features. Extensive experiments are conducted to investigate the
efficacy and properties of the proposed model. Our proposed model outperforms
previous state-of-the-art methods in assigning data to one of four emotion
categories (i.e., angry, happy, sad and neutral) when the model is applied to
the IEMOCAP dataset, as reflected by accuracies ranging from 68.8% to 71.8%.Comment: 7 pages, Accepted as a conference paper at IEEE SLT 201
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