12,219 research outputs found
Improving Source Separation via Multi-Speaker Representations
Lately there have been novel developments in deep learning towards solving
the cocktail party problem. Initial results are very promising and allow for
more research in the domain. One technique that has not yet been explored in
the neural network approach to this task is speaker adaptation. Intuitively,
information on the speakers that we are trying to separate seems fundamentally
important for the speaker separation task. However, retrieving this speaker
information is challenging since the speaker identities are not known a priori
and multiple speakers are simultaneously active. There is thus some sort of
chicken and egg problem. To tackle this, source signals and i-vectors are
estimated alternately. We show that blind multi-speaker adaptation improves the
results of the network and that (in our case) the network is not capable of
adequately retrieving this useful speaker information itself
Using audio and visual information for single channel speaker separation
This work proposes a method to exploit both audio and vi- sual speech information to extract a target speaker from a mix- ture of competing speakers. The work begins by taking an ef- fective audio-only method of speaker separation, namely the soft mask method, and modifying its operation to allow visual speech information to improve the separation process. The au- dio input is taken from a single channel and includes the mix- ture of speakers, where as a separate set of visual features are extracted from each speaker. This allows modification of the separation process to include not only the audio speech but also visual speech from each speaker in the mixture. Experimen- tal results are presented that compare the proposed audio-visual speaker separation with audio-only and visual-only methods us- ing both speech quality and speech intelligibility metrics
Deep Learning for Audio Signal Processing
Given the recent surge in developments of deep learning, this article
provides a review of the state-of-the-art deep learning techniques for audio
signal processing. Speech, music, and environmental sound processing are
considered side-by-side, in order to point out similarities and differences
between the domains, highlighting general methods, problems, key references,
and potential for cross-fertilization between areas. The dominant feature
representations (in particular, log-mel spectra and raw waveform) and deep
learning models are reviewed, including convolutional neural networks, variants
of the long short-term memory architecture, as well as more audio-specific
neural network models. Subsequently, prominent deep learning application areas
are covered, i.e. audio recognition (automatic speech recognition, music
information retrieval, environmental sound detection, localization and
tracking) and synthesis and transformation (source separation, audio
enhancement, generative models for speech, sound, and music synthesis).
Finally, key issues and future questions regarding deep learning applied to
audio signal processing are identified.Comment: 15 pages, 2 pdf figure
Transfer Learning for Speech and Language Processing
Transfer learning is a vital technique that generalizes models trained for
one setting or task to other settings or tasks. For example in speech
recognition, an acoustic model trained for one language can be used to
recognize speech in another language, with little or no re-training data.
Transfer learning is closely related to multi-task learning (cross-lingual vs.
multilingual), and is traditionally studied in the name of `model adaptation'.
Recent advance in deep learning shows that transfer learning becomes much
easier and more effective with high-level abstract features learned by deep
models, and the `transfer' can be conducted not only between data distributions
and data types, but also between model structures (e.g., shallow nets and deep
nets) or even model types (e.g., Bayesian models and neural models). This
review paper summarizes some recent prominent research towards this direction,
particularly for speech and language processing. We also report some results
from our group and highlight the potential of this very interesting research
field.Comment: 13 pages, APSIPA 201
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