21 research outputs found
UT-Scope: Towards LVCSR under Lombard effect induced by varying types and levels of noisy background
Automatic Speech Recognition Using LP-DCTC/DCS Analysis Followed by Morphological Filtering
Front-end feature extraction techniques have long been a critical component in Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR). Nonlinear filtering techniques are becoming increasingly important in this application, and are often better than linear filters at removing noise without distorting speech features. However, design and analysis of nonlinear filters are more difficult than for linear filters. Mathematical morphology, which creates filters based on shape and size characteristics, is a design structure for nonlinear filters. These filters are limited to minimum and maximum operations that introduce a deterministic bias into filtered signals.
This work develops filtering structures based on a mathematical morphology that utilizes the bias while emphasizing spectral peaks. The combination of peak emphasis via LP analysis with morphological filtering results in more noise robust speech recognition rates.
To help understand the behavior of these pre-processing techniques the deterministic and statistical properties of the morphological filters are compared to the properties of feature extraction techniques that do not employ such algorithms. The robust behavior of these algorithms for automatic speech recognition in the presence of rapidly fluctuating speech signals with additive and convolutional noise is illustrated. Examples of these nonlinear feature extraction techniques are given using the Aurora 2.0 and Aurora 3.0 databases. Features are computed using LP analysis alone to emphasize peaks, morphological filtering alone, or a combination of the two approaches. Although absolute best results are normally obtained using a combination of the two methods, morphological filtering alone is nearly as effective and much more computationally efficient
Deep audio-visual speech recognition
Decades of research in acoustic speech recognition have led to systems that we use in our everyday life. However, even the most advanced speech recognition systems fail in the presence of noise. The degraded performance can be compensated by introducing visual speech information. However, Visual Speech Recognition (VSR) in naturalistic conditions is very challenging, in part due to the lack of architectures and annotations.
This thesis contributes towards the problem of Audio-Visual Speech Recognition (AVSR) from different aspects. Firstly, we develop AVSR models for isolated words. In contrast to previous state-of-the-art methods that consists of a two-step approach, feature extraction and recognition, we present an End-to-End (E2E) approach inside a deep neural network, and this has led to a significant improvement in audio-only, visual-only and audio-visual experiments. We further replace Bi-directional Gated Recurrent Unit (BGRU) with Temporal Convolutional Networks (TCN) to greatly simplify the training procedure.
Secondly, we extend our AVSR model for continuous speech by presenting a hybrid Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC)/Attention model, that can be trained in an end-to-end manner. We then propose the addition of prediction-based auxiliary tasks to a VSR model and highlight the importance of hyper-parameter optimisation and appropriate data augmentations.
Next, we present a self-supervised framework, Learning visual speech Representations from Audio via self-supervision (LiRA). Specifically, we train a ResNet+Conformer model to predict acoustic features from unlabelled visual speech, and find that this pre-trained model can be leveraged towards word-level and sentence-level lip-reading.
We also investigate the Lombard effect influence in an end-to-end AVSR system, which is the first work using end-to-end deep architectures and presents results on unseen speakers. We show that even if a relatively small amount of Lombard speech is added to the training set then the performance in a real scenario, where noisy Lombard speech is present, can be significantly improved.
Lastly, we propose a detection method against adversarial examples in an AVSR system, where the strong correlation between audio and visual streams is leveraged. The synchronisation confidence score is leveraged as a proxy for audio-visual correlation and based on it, we can detect adversarial attacks. We apply recent adversarial attacks on two AVSR models and the experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach is an effective way for detecting such attacks.Open Acces
Bio-motivated features and deep learning for robust speech recognition
Mención Internacional en el título de doctorIn spite of the enormous leap forward that the Automatic Speech
Recognition (ASR) technologies has experienced over the last five years
their performance under hard environmental condition is still far from
that of humans preventing their adoption in several real applications.
In this thesis the challenge of robustness of modern automatic speech
recognition systems is addressed following two main research lines.
The first one focuses on modeling the human auditory system to
improve the robustness of the feature extraction stage yielding to novel
auditory motivated features. Two main contributions are produced.
On the one hand, a model of the masking behaviour of the Human
Auditory System (HAS) is introduced, based on the non-linear filtering
of a speech spectro-temporal representation applied simultaneously
to both frequency and time domains. This filtering is accomplished
by using image processing techniques, in particular mathematical
morphology operations with an specifically designed Structuring Element
(SE) that closely resembles the masking phenomena that take
place in the cochlea. On the other hand, the temporal patterns of
auditory-nerve firings are modeled. Most conventional acoustic features
are based on short-time energy per frequency band discarding
the information contained in the temporal patterns. Our contribution
is the design of several types of feature extraction schemes based on
the synchrony effect of auditory-nerve activity, showing that the modeling
of this effect can indeed improve speech recognition accuracy in
the presence of additive noise. Both models are further integrated into
the well known Power Normalized Cepstral Coefficients (PNCC).
The second research line addresses the problem of robustness in
noisy environments by means of the use of Deep Neural Networks
(DNNs)-based acoustic modeling and, in particular, of Convolutional
Neural Networks (CNNs) architectures. A deep residual network
scheme is proposed and adapted for our purposes, allowing Residual
Networks (ResNets), originally intended for image processing tasks,
to be used in speech recognition where the network input is small
in comparison with usual image dimensions. We have observed that
ResNets on their own already enhance the robustness of the whole system
against noisy conditions. Moreover, our experiments demonstrate
that their combination with the auditory motivated features devised
in this thesis provide significant improvements in recognition accuracy
in comparison to other state-of-the-art CNN-based ASR systems
under mismatched conditions, while maintaining the performance in
matched scenarios.
The proposed methods have been thoroughly tested and compared
with other state-of-the-art proposals for a variety of datasets and
conditions. The obtained results prove that our methods outperform
other state-of-the-art approaches and reveal that they are suitable for
practical applications, specially where the operating conditions are
unknown.El objetivo de esta tesis se centra en proponer soluciones al problema
del reconocimiento de habla robusto; por ello, se han llevado a cabo
dos líneas de investigación.
En la primera líınea se han propuesto esquemas de extracción de características novedosos, basados en el modelado del comportamiento
del sistema auditivo humano, modelando especialmente los fenómenos
de enmascaramiento y sincronía. En la segunda, se propone mejorar
las tasas de reconocimiento mediante el uso de técnicas de
aprendizaje profundo, en conjunto con las características propuestas.
Los métodos propuestos tienen como principal objetivo, mejorar la
precisión del sistema de reconocimiento cuando las condiciones de
operación no son conocidas, aunque el caso contrario también ha sido
abordado.
En concreto, nuestras principales propuestas son los siguientes:
Simular el sistema auditivo humano con el objetivo de mejorar
la tasa de reconocimiento en condiciones difíciles, principalmente
en situaciones de alto ruido, proponiendo esquemas de
extracción de características novedosos.
Siguiendo esta dirección, nuestras principales propuestas se detallan a continuación:
• Modelar el comportamiento de enmascaramiento del sistema
auditivo humano, usando técnicas del procesado de
imagen sobre el espectro, en concreto, llevando a cabo el
diseño de un filtro morfológico que captura este efecto.
• Modelar el efecto de la sincroní que tiene lugar en el nervio
auditivo.
• La integración de ambos modelos en los conocidos Power
Normalized Cepstral Coefficients (PNCC).
La aplicación de técnicas de aprendizaje profundo con el objetivo
de hacer el sistema más robusto frente al ruido, en particular
con el uso de redes neuronales convolucionales profundas, como
pueden ser las redes residuales.
Por último, la aplicación de las características propuestas en
combinación con las redes neuronales profundas, con el objetivo
principal de obtener mejoras significativas, cuando las condiciones
de entrenamiento y test no coinciden.Programa Oficial de Doctorado en Multimedia y ComunicacionesPresidente: Javier Ferreiros López.- Secretario: Fernando Díaz de María.- Vocal: Rubén Solera Ureñ
Segment phoneme classification from speech under noisy conditions: Using amplitude-frequency modulation based two-dimensional auto-regressive features with deep neural networks
This thesis investigates at the acoustic-phonetic level the noise robustness of features derived using the AM-FM analysis of speech signals. The analysis on the noise robustness of these features is done using various neural network models and is based on the segment classification of phonemes. This analysis is also extended and the robustness of the AM-FM based features is compared under similar noise conditions with the traditional features such as the Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients(MFCC).
We begin with an important aspect of segment phoneme classification experiments which is the study of architectural and training strategies of the various neural network models used. The results of these experiments showed that there is a difference in the training pattern adopted by the various neural network models. Before over-fitting, models that undergo pre-training are seen to train for many epochs more than their opposite models that do not undergo pre-training. Taking this difference in training pattern into perspective and based on phoneme classification rate the Gaussian restricted Boltzmann machine and the single layer perceptron are selected as the best performing model of the two groups, respectively.
Using the two best performing models for classification, segment phoneme classification experiments under different noise conditions are performed for both the AM-FM based and traditional features. The experiments showed that AM-FM based frequency domain linear prediction features with or without feature compensation are more robust in the classification of 61 phonemes under white noise and 0 signal-to-noise ratio(SNR) conditions compared to the traditional features. However, when the phonemes are folded to 39 phonemes, the results are ambiguous under all noise conditions and there is no unanimous conclusion as to which feature is most robust
Individual and environment-related acoustic-phonetic strategies for communicating in adverse conditions
In many situations it is necessary to produce speech in ‘adverse conditions’: that is, conditions that make speech communication difficult. Research has demonstrated that speaker strategies, as described by a range of acoustic-phonetic measures, can vary both at the individual level and according to the environment, and are argued to facilitate communication. There has been debate as to the environmental specificity of these adaptations, and their effectiveness in overcoming communication difficulty. Furthermore, the manner and extent to which adaptation strategies differ between individuals is not yet well understood. This thesis presents three studies that explore the acoustic-phonetic adaptations of speakers in noisy and degraded communication conditions and their relationship with intelligibility. Study 1 investigated the effects of temporally fluctuating maskers on global acoustic-phonetic measures associated with speech in noise (Lombard speech). The results replicated findings of increased power in the modulation spectrum in Lombard speech, but showed little evidence of adaptation to masker fluctuations via the temporal envelope. Study 2 collected a larger corpus of semi-spontaneous communicative speech in noise and other degradations perturbing specific acoustic dimensions. Speakers showed different adaptations across the environments that were likely suited to overcome noise (steady and temporally fluctuating), restricted spectral and pitch information by a noise-excited vocoder, and a sensorineural hearing loss simulation. Analyses of inter-speaker variation in both studies 1 and 2 showed behaviour was highly variable and some strategy combinations were identified. Study 3 investigated the intelligibility of strategies ‘tailored’ to specific environments and the relationship between intelligibility and speaker acoustics, finding a benefit of tailored speech adaptations and discussing the potential roles of speaker flexibility, adaptation level, and intrinsic intelligibility. The overall results are discussed in relation to models of communication in adverse conditions and a model accounting for individual variability in these conditions is proposed