380 research outputs found
Estimation of Severity of Speech Disability through Speech Envelope
In this paper, envelope detection of speech is discussed to distinguish the
pathological cases of speech disabled children. The speech signal samples of
children of age between five to eight years are considered for the present
study. These speech signals are digitized and are used to determine the speech
envelope. The envelope is subjected to ratio mean analysis to estimate the
disability. This analysis is conducted on ten speech signal samples which are
related to both place of articulation and manner of articulation. Overall
speech disability of a pathological subject is estimated based on the results
of above analysis.Comment: 8 pages,4 Figures,Signal & Image Processing Journal AIRC
Model-Based Speech Enhancement
Abstract
A method of speech enhancement is developed that reconstructs clean speech from
a set of acoustic features using a harmonic plus noise model of speech. This is a significant
departure from traditional filtering-based methods of speech enhancement.
A major challenge with this approach is to estimate accurately the acoustic features
(voicing, fundamental frequency, spectral envelope and phase) from noisy speech.
This is achieved using maximum a-posteriori (MAP) estimation methods that operate
on the noisy speech. In each case a prior model of the relationship between the
noisy speech features and the estimated acoustic feature is required. These models
are approximated using speaker-independent GMMs of the clean speech features
that are adapted to speaker-dependent models using MAP adaptation and for noise
using the Unscented Transform.
Objective results are presented to optimise the proposed system and a set of subjective
tests compare the approach with traditional enhancement methods. Threeway
listening tests examining signal quality, background noise intrusiveness and
overall quality show the proposed system to be highly robust to noise, performing
significantly better than conventional methods of enhancement in terms of background
noise intrusiveness. However, the proposed method is shown to reduce signal
quality, with overall quality measured to be roughly equivalent to that of the Wiener
filter
Singing information processing: techniques and applications
Por otro lado, se presenta un método para el cambio realista de intensidad de voz cantada. Esta transformación se basa en un modelo paramétrico de la envolvente espectral, y mejora sustancialmente la percepción de realismo al compararlo con software comerciales como Melodyne o Vocaloid. El inconveniente del enfoque propuesto es que requiere intervención manual, pero los resultados conseguidos arrojan importantes conclusiones hacia la modificación automática de intensidad con resultados realistas.
Por último, se propone un método para la corrección de disonancias en acordes aislados. Se basa en un análisis de múltiples F0, y un desplazamiento de la frecuencia de su componente sinusoidal. La evaluación la ha realizado un grupo de músicos entrenados, y muestra un claro incremento de la consonancia percibida después de la transformación propuesta.La voz cantada es una componente esencial de la música en todas las culturas del mundo, ya que se trata de una forma increíblemente natural de expresión musical. En consecuencia, el procesado automático de voz cantada tiene un gran impacto desde la perspectiva de la industria, la cultura y la ciencia. En este contexto, esta Tesis contribuye con un conjunto variado de técnicas y aplicaciones relacionadas con el procesado de voz cantada, así como con un repaso del estado del arte asociado en cada caso.
En primer lugar, se han comparado varios de los mejores estimadores de tono conocidos para el caso de uso de recuperación por tarareo. Los resultados demuestran que \cite{Boersma1993} (con un ajuste no obvio de parámetros) y \cite{Mauch2014}, tienen un muy buen comportamiento en dicho caso de uso dada la suavidad de los contornos de tono extraídos.
Además, se propone un novedoso sistema de transcripción de voz cantada basada en un proceso de histéresis definido en tiempo y frecuencia, así como una herramienta para evaluación de voz cantada en Matlab. El interés del método propuesto es que consigue tasas de error cercanas al estado del arte con un método muy sencillo. La herramienta de evaluación propuesta, por otro lado, es un recurso útil para definir mejor el problema, y para evaluar mejor las soluciones propuestas por futuros investigadores.
En esta Tesis también se presenta un método para evaluación automática de la interpretación vocal. Usa alineamiento temporal dinámico para alinear la interpretación del usuario con una referencia, proporcionando de esta forma una puntuación de precisión de afinación y de ritmo. La evaluación del sistema muestra una alta correlación entre las puntuaciones dadas por el sistema, y las puntuaciones anotadas por un grupo de músicos expertos
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Modelling and extraction of fundamental frequency in speech signals
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.One of the most important parameters of speech is the fundamental frequency of vibration of voiced sounds. The audio sensation of the fundamental frequency is known as the pitch. Depending on the tonal/non-tonal category of language, the fundamental frequency conveys intonation, pragmatics and meaning. In addition the fundamental frequency and intonation carry speaker gender, age, identity, speaking style and emotional state. Accurate estimation of the fundamental frequency is critically important for functioning of speech processing applications such as speech coding, speech recognition, speech synthesis and voice morphing. This thesis makes contributions to the development of accurate pitch estimation research in three distinct ways: (1) an investigation of the impact of the window length on pitch estimation error, (2) an investigation of the use of the higher order moments and (3) an investigation of an analysis-synthesis method for selection of the best pitch value among N proposed candidates. Experimental evaluations show that the length of the speech window has a major impact on the accuracy of pitch estimation. Depending on the similarity criteria and the order of the statistical moment a window length of 37 to 80 ms gives the least error. In order to avoid excessive delay as a consequence of using a longer window, a method is proposed
ii where the current short window is concatenated with the previous frames to form a longer signal window for pitch extraction. The use of second order and higher order moments, and the magnitude difference function, as the similarity criteria were explored and compared. A novel method of calculation of moments is introduced where the signal is split, i.e. rectified, into positive and negative valued samples. The moments for the positive and negative parts of the signal are computed separately and combined. The new method of calculation of moments from positive and negative parts and the higher order criteria provide competitive results. A challenging issue in pitch estimation is the determination of the best candidate from N extrema of the similarity criteria. The analysis-synthesis method proposed in this thesis selects the pitch candidate that provides the best reproduction (synthesis) of the harmonic spectrum of the original speech. The synthesis method must be such that the distortion increases with the increasing error in the estimate of the fundamental frequency. To this end a new method of spectral synthesis is proposed using an estimate of the spectral envelop and harmonically spaced asymmetric Gaussian pulses as excitation. The N-best method provides consistent reduction in pitch estimation error. The methods described in this thesis result in a significant improvement in the pitch accuracy and outperform the benchmark YIN method
Glottal-synchronous speech processing
Glottal-synchronous speech processing is a field of speech science where the pseudoperiodicity
of voiced speech is exploited. Traditionally, speech processing involves segmenting
and processing short speech frames of predefined length; this may fail to exploit the inherent
periodic structure of voiced speech which glottal-synchronous speech frames have
the potential to harness. Glottal-synchronous frames are often derived from the glottal
closure instants (GCIs) and glottal opening instants (GOIs).
The SIGMA algorithm was developed for the detection of GCIs and GOIs from
the Electroglottograph signal with a measured accuracy of up to 99.59%. For GCI and
GOI detection from speech signals, the YAGA algorithm provides a measured accuracy
of up to 99.84%. Multichannel speech-based approaches are shown to be more robust to
reverberation than single-channel algorithms.
The GCIs are applied to real-world applications including speech dereverberation,
where SNR is improved by up to 5 dB, and to prosodic manipulation where the importance
of voicing detection in glottal-synchronous algorithms is demonstrated by subjective
testing. The GCIs are further exploited in a new area of data-driven speech modelling,
providing new insights into speech production and a set of tools to aid deployment into
real-world applications. The technique is shown to be applicable in areas of speech coding,
identification and artificial bandwidth extension of telephone speec
Telephone speech enhancement for the hearing impaired
This thesis report is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Engineering, 2009.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis report.Includes bibliographical references (page 48).Bony TasnimC. Z. MurshedB. Computer Science and Engineerin
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