235 research outputs found
Audio source separation for music in low-latency and high-latency scenarios
Aquesta tesi proposa mètodes per tractar les limitacions de les tècniques existents de separació de fonts musicals en condicions de baixa i alta latència. En primer lloc, ens centrem en els mètodes amb un baix cost computacional i baixa latència. Proposem l'ús de la regularització de Tikhonov com a mètode de descomposició de l'espectre en el context de baixa latència. El comparem amb les tècniques existents en tasques d'estimació i seguiment dels tons, que són passos crucials en molts mètodes de separació. A continuació utilitzem i avaluem el mètode de descomposició de l'espectre en tasques de separació de veu cantada, baix i percussió. En segon lloc, proposem diversos mètodes d'alta latència que milloren la separació de la veu cantada, grà cies al modelatge de components especÃfics, com la respiració i les consonants. Finalment, explorem l'ús de correlacions temporals i anotacions manuals per millorar la separació dels instruments de percussió i dels senyals musicals polifònics complexes.Esta tesis propone métodos para tratar las limitaciones de las técnicas existentes de separación de fuentes musicales en condiciones de baja y alta latencia. En primer lugar, nos centramos en los métodos con un bajo coste computacional y baja latencia. Proponemos el uso de la regularización de Tikhonov como método de descomposición del espectro en el contexto de baja latencia. Lo comparamos con las técnicas existentes en tareas de estimación y seguimiento de los tonos, que son pasos cruciales en muchos métodos de separación. A continuación utilizamos y evaluamos el método de descomposición del espectro en tareas de separación de voz cantada, bajo y percusión. En segundo lugar, proponemos varios métodos de alta latencia que mejoran la separación de la voz cantada, gracias al modelado de componentes que a menudo no se toman en cuenta, como la respiración y las consonantes. Finalmente, exploramos el uso de correlaciones temporales y anotaciones manuales para mejorar la separación de los instrumentos de percusión y señales musicales polifónicas complejas.This thesis proposes specific methods to address the limitations of current music source separation methods in low-latency and high-latency scenarios. First, we focus on methods with low computational cost and low latency. We propose the use of Tikhonov regularization as a method for spectrum decomposition in the low-latency context. We compare it to existing techniques in pitch estimation and tracking tasks, crucial steps in many separation methods. We then use the proposed spectrum decomposition method in low-latency separation tasks targeting singing voice, bass and drums. Second, we propose several high-latency methods that improve the separation of singing voice by modeling components that are often not accounted for, such as breathiness and consonants. Finally, we explore using temporal correlations and human annotations to enhance the separation of drums and complex polyphonic music signals
Pitch-Informed Solo and Accompaniment Separation
Das Thema dieser Dissertation ist die Entwicklung eines Systems zur
Tonhöhen-informierten Quellentrennung von Musiksignalen in Soloinstrument
und Begleitung. Dieses ist geeignet, die dominanten Instrumente aus einem
Musikstück zu isolieren, unabhängig von der Art des Instruments, der
Begleitung und Stilrichtung. Dabei werden nur einstimmige
Melodieinstrumente in Betracht gezogen. Die Musikaufnahmen liegen monaural
vor, es kann also keine zusätzliche Information aus der Verteilung der
Instrumente im Stereo-Panorama gewonnen werden.
Die entwickelte Methode nutzt Tonhöhen-Information als Basis für eine
sinusoidale Modellierung der spektralen Eigenschaften des Soloinstruments
aus dem Musikmischsignal. Anstatt die spektralen Informationen pro Frame zu
bestimmen, werden in der vorgeschlagenen Methode Tonobjekte für die
Separation genutzt. Tonobjekt-basierte Verarbeitung ermöglicht es,
zusätzlich die Notenanfänge zu verfeinern, transiente Artefakte zu
reduzieren, gemeinsame Amplitudenmodulation (Common Amplitude Modulation
CAM) einzubeziehen und besser nichtharmonische Elemente der Töne
abzuschätzen. Der vorgestellte Algorithmus zur Quellentrennung von
Soloinstrument und Begleitung ermöglicht eine Echtzeitverarbeitung und ist
somit relevant für den praktischen Einsatz.
Ein Experiment zur besseren Modellierung der Zusammenhänge zwischen
Magnitude, Phase und Feinfrequenz von isolierten Instrumententönen wurde
durchgeführt. Als Ergebnis konnte die Kontinuität der zeitlichen
Einhüllenden, die Inharmonizität bestimmter Musikinstrumente und die
Auswertung des Phasenfortschritts für die vorgestellte Methode ausgenutzt
werden. Zusätzlich wurde ein Algorithmus für die Quellentrennung in
perkussive und harmonische Signalanteile auf Basis des Phasenfortschritts
entwickelt. Dieser erreicht ein verbesserte perzeptuelle Qualität der
harmonischen und perkussiven Signale gegenüber vergleichbaren Methoden nach
dem Stand der Technik.
Die vorgestellte Methode zur Klangquellentrennung in Soloinstrument und
Begleitung wurde zu den Evaluationskampagnen SiSEC 2011 und SiSEC 2013
eingereicht. Dort konnten vergleichbare Ergebnisse im Hinblick auf
perzeptuelle Bewertungsmaße erzielt werden. Die Qualität eines
Referenzalgorithmus im Hinblick auf den in dieser Dissertation
beschriebenen Instrumentaldatensatz übertroffen werden.
Als ein Anwendungsszenario für die Klangquellentrennung in Solo und
Begleitung wurde ein Hörtest durchgeführt, der die Qualitätsanforderungen
an Quellentrennung im Kontext von Musiklernsoftware bewerten sollte. Die
Ergebnisse dieses Hörtests zeigen, dass die Solo- und Begleitspur gemäß
unterschiedlicher Qualitätskriterien getrennt werden sollten. Die
Musiklernsoftware Songs2See integriert die vorgestellte
Klangquellentrennung bereits in einer kommerziell erhältlichen Anwendung.This thesis addresses the development of a system for pitch-informed solo
and accompaniment separation capable of separating main instruments from
music accompaniment regardless of the musical genre of the track, or type
of music accompaniment. For the solo instrument, only pitched monophonic
instruments were considered in a single-channel scenario where no panning
or spatial location information is available.
In the proposed method, pitch information is used as an initial stage of a
sinusoidal modeling approach that attempts to estimate the spectral
information of the solo instrument from a given audio mixture. Instead of
estimating the solo instrument on a frame by frame basis, the proposed
method gathers information of tone objects to perform separation.
Tone-based processing allowed the inclusion of novel processing stages for
attack refinement, transient interference reduction, common amplitude
modulation (CAM) of tone objects, and for better estimation of non-harmonic
elements that can occur in musical instrument tones. The proposed solo and
accompaniment algorithm is an efficient method suitable for real-world
applications.
A study was conducted to better model magnitude, frequency, and phase of
isolated musical instrument tones. As a result of this study, temporal
envelope smoothness, inharmonicty of musical instruments, and phase
expectation were exploited in the proposed separation method. Additionally,
an algorithm for harmonic/percussive separation based on phase expectation
was proposed. The algorithm shows improved perceptual quality with respect
to state-of-the-art methods for harmonic/percussive separation.
The proposed solo and accompaniment method obtained perceptual quality
scores comparable to other state-of-the-art algorithms under the SiSEC 2011
and SiSEC 2013 campaigns, and outperformed the comparison algorithm on the
instrumental dataset described in this thesis.As a use-case of solo and
accompaniment separation, a listening test procedure was conducted to
assess separation quality requirements in the context of music education.
Results from the listening test showed that solo and accompaniment tracks
should be optimized differently to suit quality requirements of music
education. The Songs2See application was presented as commercial music
learning software which includes the proposed solo and accompaniment
separation method
Real-time Sound Source Separation For Music Applications
Sound source separation refers to the task of extracting individual sound sources from some number of mixtures of those sound sources. In this thesis, a novel sound source separation algorithm for musical applications is presented. It leverages the fact that the vast majority of commercially recorded music since the 1950s has been mixed down for two channel reproduction, more commonly known as stereo. The algorithm presented in Chapter 3 in this thesis requires no prior knowledge or learning and performs the task of separation based purely on azimuth discrimination within the stereo field. The algorithm exploits the use of the pan pot as a means to achieve image localisation within stereophonic recordings. As such, only an interaural intensity difference exists between left and right channels for a single source. We use gain scaling and phase cancellation techniques to expose frequency dependent nulls across the azimuth domain, from which source separation and resynthesis is carried out. The algorithm is demonstrated to be state of the art in the field of sound source separation but also to be a useful pre-process to other tasks such as music segmentation and surround sound upmixing
Automatic Drum Transcription and Source Separation
While research has been carried out on automated polyphonic music transcription, to-date the problem of automated polyphonic percussion transcription has not received the same degree of attention. A related problem is that of sound source separation, which attempts to separate a mixture signal into its constituent sources. This thesis focuses on the task of polyphonic percussion transcription and sound source separation of a limited set of drum instruments, namely the drums found in the standard rock/pop drum kit. As there was little previous research on polyphonic percussion transcription a broad review of music information retrieval methods, including previous polyphonic percussion systems, was also carried out to determine if there were any methods which were of potential use in the area of polyphonic drum transcription. Following on from this a review was conducted of general source separation and redundancy reduction techniques, such as Independent Component Analysis and Independent Subspace Analysis, as these techniques have shown potential in separating mixtures of sources. Upon completion of the review it was decided that a combination of the blind separation approach, Independent Subspace Analysis (ISA), with the use of prior knowledge as used in music information retrieval methods, was the best approach to tackling the problem of polyphonic percussion transcription as well as that of sound source separation. A number of new algorithms which combine the use of prior knowledge with the source separation abilities of techniques such as ISA are presented. These include sub-band ISA, Prior Subspace Analysis (PSA), and an automatic modelling and grouping technique which is used in conjunction with PSA to perform polyphonic percussion transcription. These approaches are demonstrated to be effective in the task of polyphonic percussion transcription, and PSA is also demonstrated to be capable of transcribing drums in the presence of pitched instruments
Computer Models for Musical Instrument Identification
PhDA particular aspect in the perception of sound is concerned with what is commonly
termed as texture or timbre. From a perceptual perspective, timbre is what allows us
to distinguish sounds that have similar pitch and loudness. Indeed most people are
able to discern a piano tone from a violin tone or able to distinguish different voices
or singers.
This thesis deals with timbre modelling. Specifically, the formant theory of timbre
is the main theme throughout. This theory states that acoustic musical instrument
sounds can be characterised by their formant structures. Following this principle, the
central point of our approach is to propose a computer implementation for building
musical instrument identification and classification systems.
Although the main thrust of this thesis is to propose a coherent and unified
approach to the musical instrument identification problem, it is oriented towards the
development of algorithms that can be used in Music Information Retrieval (MIR)
frameworks. Drawing on research in speech processing, a complete supervised system
taking into account both physical and perceptual aspects of timbre is described.
The approach is composed of three distinct processing layers. Parametric models
that allow us to represent signals through mid-level physical and perceptual representations
are considered. Next, the use of the Line Spectrum Frequencies as spectral
envelope and formant descriptors is emphasised. Finally, the use of generative and
discriminative techniques for building instrument and database models is investigated.
Our system is evaluated under realistic recording conditions using databases of isolated
notes and melodic phrases
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