3 research outputs found

    Introduction to the Special Issue “Speaker and Language Characterization and Recognition: Voice Modeling, Conversion, Synthesis and Ethical Aspects”

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    International audienceWelcome to this special issue on Speaker and Language Characterization which features, among other contributions, some of the most remarkable ideas presented and discussed at Odyssey 2018: the Speaker and Language Recognition Workshop, held in Les Sables d'Olonne, France, in June 2018. This issue perpetuates the series proposed by ISCA Speaker and language Characterization Special Interest Group in coordination with ISCA Speaker Odyssey workshops [1, 2, 3]. Voice is one of the most casual modalities for natural and intuitive interactions between humans as well as between humans and machines. Voice is also a central part of our identity. Voice-based solutions are currently deployed in a growing variety of applications, including person authentication through automatic speaker verification (ASV). A related technology concerns digital cloning of personal voice characteristics for text-to-speech (TTS) and voice conversion (VC). In the last years, the impressive advancements of the VC/TTS field opened the way for numerous new consumer applications. Especially, VC is offering new solutions for privacy protection. However, VC/TTS also brings the possibility of misuse of the technology in order to spoof ASV systems (for example presentation attacks implemented using voice conversion). As a direct consequence, spoofing countermeasures raises a growing interest during the past years. Moreover, voice is a central part of our identity and is also bringing othe

    Effects of language mismatch in automatic forensic voice comparison using deep learning embeddings

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    In forensic voice comparison the speaker embedding has become widely popular in the last 10 years. Most of the pretrained speaker embeddings are trained on English corpora, because it is easily accessible. Thus, language dependency can be an important factor in automatic forensic voice comparison, especially when the target language is linguistically very different. There are numerous commercial systems available, but their models are mainly trained on a different language (mostly English) than the target language. In the case of a low-resource language, developing a corpus for forensic purposes containing enough speakers to train deep learning models is costly. This study aims to investigate whether a model pre-trained on English corpus can be used on a target low-resource language (here, Hungarian), different from the model is trained on. Also, often multiple samples are not available from the offender (unknown speaker). Therefore, samples are compared pairwise with and without speaker enrollment for suspect (known) speakers. Two corpora are applied that were developed especially for forensic purposes, and a third that is meant for traditional speaker verification. Two deep learning based speaker embedding vector extraction methods are used: the x-vector and ECAPA-TDNN. Speaker verification was evaluated in the likelihood-ratio framework. A comparison is made between the language combinations (modeling, LR calibration, evaluation). The results were evaluated by minCllr and EER metrics. It was found that the model pre-trained on a different language but on a corpus with a huge amount of speakers performs well on samples with language mismatch. The effect of sample durations and speaking styles were also examined. It was found that the longer the duration of the sample in question the better the performance is. Also, there is no real difference if various speaking styles are applied
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