281 research outputs found

    Noise cancellation over spatial regions using adaptive wave domain processing

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    This paper proposes wave-domain adaptive processing for noise cancellation within a large spatial region. We use fundamental solutions of the Helmholtz wave-equation as basis functions to express the noise field over a spatial region and show the wave-domain processing directly on the decomposition coefficients to control the entire region. A feedback control system is implemented, where only a single microphone array is placed at the boundary of the control region to measure the residual signals, and a loudspeaker array is used to generate the anti-noise signals. We develop the adaptive wave-domain filtered-x least mean square algorithm. Simulation results show that using the proposed method the noise over the entire control region can be significantly reduced with fast convergence in both free-field and reverberant environmentsThanks to Australian Research Councils Discovery Projects funding scheme (project no. DP140103412). The work of J. Zhang was sponsored by the China Scholarship Council with the Australian National University

    주파수 및 시간적 상관관계에 기반한 음향학적 에코 억제 기법

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    학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 전기·컴퓨터공학부, 2016. 8. 김남수.In the past decades, a number of approaches have been dedicated to acoustic echo cancellation and suppression which reduce the negative effects of acoustic echo, namely the acoustic coupling between the loudspeaker and microphone in a room. In particular, the increasing use of full-duplex telecommunication systems has led to the requirement of faster and more reliable acoustic echo cancellation algorithms. The solutions have been based on adaptive filters, but the length of these filters has to be long enough to consider most of the echo signal and linear filtering in these algorithms may be limited to remove the echo signal in various environments. In this thesis, a novel stereophonic acoustic echo suppression (SAES) technique based on spectral and temporal correlations is proposed in the short-time Fourier transform (STFT) domain. Unlike traditional stereophonic acoustic echo cancellation, the proposed algorithm estimates the echo spectra in the STFT domain and uses a Wiener filter to suppress echo without performing any explicit double-talk detection. The proposed approach takes account of interdependencies among components in adjacent time frames and frequency bins, which enables more accurate estimation of the echo signals. Due to the limitations of power amplifiers or loudspeakers, the echo signals captured in the microphones are not in a linear relationship with the far-end signals even when the echo path is perfectly linear. The nonlinear components of the echo cannot be successfully removed by a linear acoustic echo canceller. The remaining echo components in the output of acoustic echo suppression (AES) can be further suppressed by applying residual echo suppression (RES) algorithms. In this thesis, we propose an optimal RES gain estimation based on deep neural network (DNN) exploiting both the far-end and the AES output signals in all frequency bins. A DNN structure is introduced as a regression function representing the complex nonlinear mapping from these signals to the optimal RES gain. Because of the capability of the DNN, the spectro-temporal correlations in the full-band can be considered while finding the nonlinear function. The proposed method does not require any explicit double-talk detectors to deal with single-talk and double-talk situations. One of the well-known approaches for nonlinear acoustic echo cancellation is an adaptive Volterra filtering and various algorithms based on the Volterra filter were proposed to describe the characteristics of nonlinear echo and showed the better performance than the conventional linear filtering. However, the performance might be not satisfied since these algorithms could not consider the full correlation for the nonlinear relationship between the input signal and far-end signal in time-frequency domain. In this thesis, we propose a novel DNN-based approach for nonlinear acoustic echo suppression (NAES), extending the proposed RES algorithm. Instead of estimating the residual gain for suppressing the nonlinear echo components, the proposed algorithm straightforwardly recovers the near-end speech signal through the direct gain estimation obtained from DNN frameworks on the input and far-end signal. For echo aware training, a priori and a posteriori signal-to-echo ratio (SER) are introduced as additional inputs of the DNN for tracking the change of the echo signal. In addition, the multi-task learning (MTL) to the DNN-based NAES is combined to the DNN incorporating echo aware training for robustness. In the proposed system, an additional task of double-talk detection is jointly trained with the primary task of the gain estimation for NAES. The DNN can learn the good representations which can suppress more in single-talk periods and improve the gain estimates in double-talk periods through the MTL framework. Besides, the proposed NAES using echo aware training and MTL with double-talk detection makes the DNN be more robust in various conditions. The proposed techniques show significantly better performance than the conventional AES methods in both single- and double-talk periods. As a pre-processing of various applications such as speech recognition and speech enhancement, these approaches can help to transmit the clean speech and provide an acceptable communication in full-duplex real environments.Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Background 1 1.2 Scope of thesis 3 Chapter 2 Conventional Approaches for Acoustic Echo Suppression 7 2.1 Single Channel Acoustic Echo Cancellation and Suppression 8 2.1.1 Single Channel Acoustic Echo Cancellation 8 2.1.2 Adaptive Filters for Acoustic Echo Cancellation 10 2.1.3 Acoustic Echo Suppression Based on Spectral Modication 11 2.2 Residual Echo Suppression 13 2.2.1 Spectral Feature-based Nonlinear Residual Echo Suppression 15 2.3 Stereophonic Acoustic Echo Cancellation 17 2.4 Wiener Filtering for Stereophonic Acoustic Echo Suppression 20 Chapter 3 Stereophonic Acoustic Echo Suppression Incorporating Spectro-Temporal Correlations 25 3.1 Introduction 25 3.2 Linear Time-Invariant Systems in the STFT Domain with Crossband Filtering 26 3.3 Enhanced SAES (ESAES) Utilizing Spectro-Temporal Correlations 29 3.3.1 Problem Formulation 31 3.3.2 Estimation of Extended PSD Matrices, Echo Spectra, and Gain Function 34 3.3.3 Complexity of the Proposed ESAES Algorithm 36 3.4 Experimental Results 37 3.5 Summary 41 Chapter 4 Nonlinear Residual Echo Suppression Based on Deep Neural Network 43 4.1 Introduction 43 4.2 A Brief Review on RES 45 4.3 Deep Neural Networks 46 4.4 Nonlinear RES using Deep Neural Network 49 4.5 Experimental Results 52 4.5.1 Combination with Stereophonic Acoustic Echo Suppression 59 4.6 Summary 61 Chapter 5 Enhanced Deep Learning Frameworks for Nonlinear Acoustic Echo Suppression 69 5.1 Introduction 69 5.2 DNN-based Nonlinear Acoustic Echo Suppression using Echo Aware Training 72 5.3 Multi-Task Learning for NAES 75 5.4 Experimental Results 78 5.5 Summary 82 Chapter 6 Conclusions 89 Bibliography 91 요약 101Docto

    Distributed Microphone Array System for Two-way Audio Communication

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    Tässä työssä esitellään hajautettu mikrofoniryhmäjärjestelmä kahdensuuntaisessa äänikommunikaatiossa. Järjestelmän tavoitteena on paikallistaa hallitseva puhuja ja tallentaa puhesignaali mahdollisimman korkealaatuisesti. Työssä esiteltävässä järjestelmässä jokainen mikrofoniryhmä toimii polynomirakenteella parametrisoituna keilanmuodostajana (PBF), joka mahdollistaa jatkuvan keilanohjauksen. Hallitsevan puhelähteen suunta päätellään PBF:n jokaisen keilan ulostulotehoista. Lopuksi yhdistämällä jokaisen PBF:n kaikkien keilojen ulostulotehot muodostetaan avaruudellinen todennäköisyysfunktio (SLF), jonka suurin arvo määrää puhujan paikan. Puhesignaali tallennetaan ohjaamalla puhujaa lähinnä olevan PBF:n keila puhujan suuntaan. Tässä työssä esiteltävän järjestelmän toiminta arvioitiin simuloidulla ja mitatulla datalla. Arvionti näyttää, että toteutettu järjestelmä pystyy paikallistamaan puhujan noin 40 cm paikannustarkkuudella ja järjestelmä vaimentaa muista suunnista tulevia häiriölähteitä noin 15 dB. Lopuksi järjestelmä toteutettiin reaaliakaisena systeeminä Pure Data signaalinkäsittelyympäristössä.In this work a distributed microphone array system for two-way audio communication is presented. The goal of the system is to locate the dominant speaker and capture the speech signal with highest possible quality. In the presented system each microphone array works as a Polynomial Beamformer (PBF) thus enabling continuous beam steering. The output power of each PBF beam is used to determine the direction of the dominant speech source. Finally, a Spatial Likelihood Function (SLF) is formed by combining the output beam powers of each microphone array and the speaker is determined to be in the point that has highest value of SLF. The audio signal capture is done by steering the closest microphone array to the direction of the speaker. The presented audio capture front-end was evaluated with simulated and measured data. The evaluation shows that the implemented system gives approximately 40 cm localization accuracy and 15 dB attenuation of interference sources. Finally the system was implemented to run in real-time in the Pure Data signal processing environment

    An investigation of the utility of monaural sound source separation via nonnegative matrix factorization applied to acoustic echo and reverberation mitigation for hands-free telephony

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    In this thesis we investigate the applicability and utility of Monaural Sound Source Separation (MSSS) via Nonnegative Matrix Factorization (NMF) for various problems related to audio for hands-free telephony. We first investigate MSSS via NMF as an alternative acoustic echo reduction approach to existing approaches such as Acoustic Echo Cancellation (AEC). To this end, we present the single-channel acoustic echo problem as an MSSS problem, in which the objective is to extract the users signal from a mixture also containing acoustic echo and noise. To perform separation, NMF is used to decompose the near-end microphone signal onto the union of two nonnegative bases in the magnitude Short Time Fourier Transform domain. One of these bases is for the spectral energy of the acoustic echo signal, and is formed from the in- coming far-end user’s speech, while the other basis is for the spectral energy of the near-end speaker, and is trained with speech data a priori. In comparison to AEC, the speaker extraction approach obviates Double-Talk Detection (DTD), and is demonstrated to attain its maximal echo mitigation performance immediately upon initiation and to maintain that performance during and after room changes for similar computational requirements. Speaker extraction is also shown to introduce distortion of the near-end speech signal during double-talk, which is quantified by means of a speech distortion measure and compared to that of AEC. Subsequently, we address Double-Talk Detection (DTD) for block-based AEC algorithms. We propose a novel block-based DTD algorithm that uses the available signals and the estimate of the echo signal that is produced by NMF-based speaker extraction to compute a suitably normalized correlation-based decision variable, which is compared to a fixed threshold to decide on doubletalk. Using a standard evaluation technique, the proposed algorithm is shown to have comparable detection performance to an existing conventional block-based DTD algorithm. It is also demonstrated to inherit the room change insensitivity of speaker extraction, with the proposed DTD algorithm generating minimal false doubletalk indications upon initiation and in response to room changes in comparison to the existing conventional DTD. We also show that this property allows its paired AEC to converge at a rate close to the optimum. Another focus of this thesis is the problem of inverting a single measurement of a non- minimum phase Room Impulse Response (RIR). We describe the process by which percep- tually detrimental all-pass phase distortion arises in reverberant speech filtered by the inverse of the minimum phase component of the RIR; in short, such distortion arises from inverting the magnitude response of the high-Q maximum phase zeros of the RIR. We then propose two novel partial inversion schemes that precisely mitigate this distortion. One of these schemes employs NMF-based MSSS to separate the all-pass phase distortion from the target speech in the magnitude STFT domain, while the other approach modifies the inverse minimum phase filter such that the magnitude response of the maximum phase zeros of the RIR is not fully compensated. Subjective listening tests reveal that the proposed schemes generally produce better quality output speech than a comparable inversion technique

    An investigation of the utility of monaural sound source separation via nonnegative matrix factorization applied to acoustic echo and reverberation mitigation for hands-free telephony

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    In this thesis we investigate the applicability and utility of Monaural Sound Source Separation (MSSS) via Nonnegative Matrix Factorization (NMF) for various problems related to audio for hands-free telephony. We first investigate MSSS via NMF as an alternative acoustic echo reduction approach to existing approaches such as Acoustic Echo Cancellation (AEC). To this end, we present the single-channel acoustic echo problem as an MSSS problem, in which the objective is to extract the users signal from a mixture also containing acoustic echo and noise. To perform separation, NMF is used to decompose the near-end microphone signal onto the union of two nonnegative bases in the magnitude Short Time Fourier Transform domain. One of these bases is for the spectral energy of the acoustic echo signal, and is formed from the in- coming far-end user’s speech, while the other basis is for the spectral energy of the near-end speaker, and is trained with speech data a priori. In comparison to AEC, the speaker extraction approach obviates Double-Talk Detection (DTD), and is demonstrated to attain its maximal echo mitigation performance immediately upon initiation and to maintain that performance during and after room changes for similar computational requirements. Speaker extraction is also shown to introduce distortion of the near-end speech signal during double-talk, which is quantified by means of a speech distortion measure and compared to that of AEC. Subsequently, we address Double-Talk Detection (DTD) for block-based AEC algorithms. We propose a novel block-based DTD algorithm that uses the available signals and the estimate of the echo signal that is produced by NMF-based speaker extraction to compute a suitably normalized correlation-based decision variable, which is compared to a fixed threshold to decide on doubletalk. Using a standard evaluation technique, the proposed algorithm is shown to have comparable detection performance to an existing conventional block-based DTD algorithm. It is also demonstrated to inherit the room change insensitivity of speaker extraction, with the proposed DTD algorithm generating minimal false doubletalk indications upon initiation and in response to room changes in comparison to the existing conventional DTD. We also show that this property allows its paired AEC to converge at a rate close to the optimum. Another focus of this thesis is the problem of inverting a single measurement of a non- minimum phase Room Impulse Response (RIR). We describe the process by which percep- tually detrimental all-pass phase distortion arises in reverberant speech filtered by the inverse of the minimum phase component of the RIR; in short, such distortion arises from inverting the magnitude response of the high-Q maximum phase zeros of the RIR. We then propose two novel partial inversion schemes that precisely mitigate this distortion. One of these schemes employs NMF-based MSSS to separate the all-pass phase distortion from the target speech in the magnitude STFT domain, while the other approach modifies the inverse minimum phase filter such that the magnitude response of the maximum phase zeros of the RIR is not fully compensated. Subjective listening tests reveal that the proposed schemes generally produce better quality output speech than a comparable inversion technique

    Spatial Multizone Soundfield Reproduction Design

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    It is desirable for people sharing a physical space to access different multimedia information streams simultaneously. For a good user experience, the interference of the different streams should be held to a minimum. This is straightforward for the video component but currently difficult for the audio sound component. Spatial multizone soundfield reproduction, which aims to provide an individual sound environment to each of a set of listeners without the use of physical isolation or headphones, has drawn significant attention of researchers in recent years. The realization of multizone soundfield reproduction is a conceptually challenging problem as currently most of the soundfield reproduction techniques concentrate on a single zone. This thesis considers the theory and design of a multizone soundfield reproduction system using arrays of loudspeakers in given complex environments. We first introduce a novel method for spatial multizone soundfield reproduction based on describing the desired multizone soundfield as an orthogonal expansion of formulated basis functions over the desired reproduction region. This provides the theoretical basis of both 2-D (height invariant) and 3-D soundfield reproduction for this work. We then extend the reproduction of the multizone soundfield over the desired region to reverberant environments, which is based on the identification of the acoustic transfer function (ATF) from the loudspeaker over the desired reproduction region using sparse methods. The simulation results confirm that the method leads to a significantly reduced number of required microphones for an accurate multizone sound reproduction compared with the state of the art, while it also facilitates the reproduction over a wide frequency range. In addition, we focus on the improvements of the proposed multizone reproduction system with regard to practical implementation. The so-called 2.5D multizone oundfield reproduction is considered to accurately reproduce the desired multizone soundfield over a selected 2-D plane at the height approximately level with the listener’s ears using a single array of loudspeakers with 3-D reverberant settings. Then, we propose an adaptive reverberation cancelation method for the multizone soundfield reproduction within the desired region and simplify the prior soundfield measurement process. Simulation results suggest that the proposed method provides a faster convergence rate than the comparative approaches under the same hardware provision. Finally, we conduct the real-world implementation based on the proposed theoretical work. The experimental results show that we can achieve a very noticeable acoustic energy contrast between the signals recorded in the bright zone and the quiet zone, especially for the system implementation with reverberation equalization

    Deep Learning for Distant Speech Recognition

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    Deep learning is an emerging technology that is considered one of the most promising directions for reaching higher levels of artificial intelligence. Among the other achievements, building computers that understand speech represents a crucial leap towards intelligent machines. Despite the great efforts of the past decades, however, a natural and robust human-machine speech interaction still appears to be out of reach, especially when users interact with a distant microphone in noisy and reverberant environments. The latter disturbances severely hamper the intelligibility of a speech signal, making Distant Speech Recognition (DSR) one of the major open challenges in the field. This thesis addresses the latter scenario and proposes some novel techniques, architectures, and algorithms to improve the robustness of distant-talking acoustic models. We first elaborate on methodologies for realistic data contamination, with a particular emphasis on DNN training with simulated data. We then investigate on approaches for better exploiting speech contexts, proposing some original methodologies for both feed-forward and recurrent neural networks. Lastly, inspired by the idea that cooperation across different DNNs could be the key for counteracting the harmful effects of noise and reverberation, we propose a novel deep learning paradigm called network of deep neural networks. The analysis of the original concepts were based on extensive experimental validations conducted on both real and simulated data, considering different corpora, microphone configurations, environments, noisy conditions, and ASR tasks.Comment: PhD Thesis Unitn, 201

    Broadband adaptive beamforming with low complexity and frequency invariant response

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    This thesis proposes different methods to reduce the computational complexity as well as increasing the adaptation rate of adaptive broadband beamformers. This is performed exemplarily for the generalised sidelobe canceller (GSC) structure. The GSC is an alternative implementation of the linearly constrained minimum variance beamformer, which can utilise well-known adaptive filtering algorithms, such as the least mean square (LMS) or the recursive least squares (RLS) to perform unconstrained adaptive optimisation.A direct DFT implementation, by which broadband signals are decomposed into frequency bins and processed by independent narrowband beamforming algorithms, is thought to be computationally optimum. However, this setup fail to converge to the time domain minimum mean square error (MMSE) if signal components are not aligned to frequency bins, resulting in a large worst case error. To mitigate this problem of the so-called independent frequency bin (IFB) processor, overlap-save based GSC beamforming structures have been explored. This system address the minimisation of the time domain MMSE, with a significant reduction in computational complexity when compared to time-domain implementations, and show a better convergence behaviour than the IFB beamformer. By studying the effects that the blocking matrix has on the adaptive process for the overlap-save beamformer, several modifications are carried out to enhance both the simplicity of the algorithm as well as its convergence speed. These modifications result in the GSC beamformer utilising a significantly lower computational complexity compare to the time domain approach while offering similar convergence characteristics.In certain applications, especially in the areas of acoustics, there is a need to maintain constant resolution across a wide operating spectrum that may extend across several octaves. To attain constant beamwidth is difficult, particularly if uniformly spaced linear sensor array are employed for beamforming, since spatial resolution is reciprocally proportional to both the array aperture and the frequency. A scaled aperture arrangement is introduced for the subband based GSC beamformer to achieve near uniform resolution across a wide spectrum, whereby an octave-invariant design is achieved. This structure can also be operated in conjunction with adaptive beamforming algorithms. Frequency dependent tapering of the sensor signals is proposed in combination with the overlap-save GSC structure in order to achieve an overall frequency-invariant characteristic. An adaptive version is proposed for frequency-invariant overlap-save GSC beamformer. Broadband adaptive beamforming algorithms based on the family of least mean squares (LMS) algorithms are known to exhibit slow convergence if the input signal is correlated. To improve the convergence of the GSC when based on LMS-type algorithms, we propose the use of a broadband eigenvalue decomposition (BEVD) to decorrelate the input of the adaptive algorithm in the spatial dimension, for which an increase in convergence speed can be demonstrated over other decorrelating measures, such as the Karhunen-Loeve transform. In order to address the remaining temporal correlation after BEVD processing, this approach is combined with subband decomposition through the use of oversampled filter banks. The resulting spatially and temporally decorrelated GSC beamformer provides further enhanced convergence speed over spatial or temporal decorrelation methods on their own
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