99 research outputs found
An application of an auditory periphery model in speaker identification
The number of applications of automatic Speaker Identification (SID) is growing due to the advanced technologies for secure access and authentication in services and devices. In 2016, in a study, the Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators with Fast Acting Compression (CAR FAC) cochlear model achieved the best performance among seven recent cochlear models to fit a set of human auditory physiological data. Motivated by the performance of the CAR-FAC, I apply this cochlear model in an SID task for the first time to produce a similar performance to a human auditory system. This thesis investigates the potential of the CAR-FAC model in an SID task. I investigate the capability of the CAR-FAC in text-dependent and text-independent SID tasks. This thesis also investigates contributions of different parameters, nonlinearities, and stages of the CAR-FAC that enhance SID accuracy. The performance of the CAR-FAC is compared with another recent cochlear model called the Auditory Nerve (AN) model. In addition, three FFT-based auditory features – Mel frequency Cepstral Coefficient (MFCC), Frequency Domain Linear Prediction (FDLP), and Gammatone Frequency Cepstral Coefficient (GFCC), are also included to compare their performance with cochlear features. This comparison allows me to investigate a better front-end for a noise-robust SID system. Three different statistical classifiers: a Gaussian Mixture Model with Universal Background Model (GMM-UBM), a Support Vector Machine (SVM), and an I-vector were used to evaluate the performance. These statistical classifiers allow me to investigate nonlinearities in the cochlear front-ends. The performance is evaluated under clean and noisy conditions for a wide range of noise levels. Techniques to improve the performance of a cochlear algorithm are also investigated in this thesis. It was found that the application of a cube root and DCT on cochlear output enhances the SID accuracy substantially
Robust text independent closed set speaker identification systems and their evaluation
PhD ThesisThis thesis focuses upon text independent closed set speaker
identi cation. The contributions relate to evaluation studies in the
presence of various types of noise and handset e ects. Extensive
evaluations are performed on four databases.
The rst contribution is in the context of the use of the Gaussian
Mixture Model-Universal Background Model (GMM-UBM) with
original speech recordings from only the TIMIT database. Four main
simulations for Speaker Identi cation Accuracy (SIA) are presented
including di erent fusion strategies: Late fusion (score based), early
fusion (feature based) and early-late fusion (combination of feature and
score based), late fusion using concatenated static and dynamic
features (features with temporal derivatives such as rst order
derivative delta and second order derivative delta-delta features,
namely acceleration features), and nally fusion of statistically
independent normalized scores.
The second contribution is again based on the GMM-UBM
approach. Comprehensive evaluations of the e ect of Additive White
Gaussian Noise (AWGN), and Non-Stationary Noise (NSN) (with and
without a G.712 type handset) upon identi cation performance are
undertaken. In particular, three NSN types with varying Signal to
Noise Ratios (SNRs) were tested corresponding to: street tra c, a bus
interior and a crowded talking environment. The performance
evaluation also considered the e ect of late fusion techniques based on
score fusion, namely mean, maximum, and linear weighted sum fusion.
The databases employed were: TIMIT, SITW, and NIST 2008; and 120
speakers were selected from each database to yield 3,600 speech
utterances.
The third contribution is based on the use of the I-vector, four
combinations of I-vectors with 100 and 200 dimensions were employed.
Then, various fusion techniques using maximum, mean, weighted sum
and cumulative fusion with the same I-vector dimension were used to
improve the SIA. Similarly, both interleaving and concatenated I-vector
fusion were exploited to produce 200 and 400 I-vector dimensions. The
system was evaluated with four di erent databases using 120 speakers
from each database. TIMIT, SITW and NIST 2008 databases were
evaluated for various types of NSN namely, street-tra c NSN,
bus-interior NSN and crowd talking NSN; and the G.712 type handset
at 16 kHz was also applied.
As recommendations from the study in terms of the GMM-UBM
approach, mean fusion is found to yield overall best performance in terms
of the SIA with noisy speech, whereas linear weighted sum fusion is
overall best for original database recordings. However, in the I-vector
approach the best SIA was obtained from the weighted sum and the
concatenated fusion.Ministry of Higher Education
and Scienti c Research (MoHESR), and the Iraqi Cultural Attach e,
Al-Mustansiriya University, Al-Mustansiriya University College of
Engineering in Iraq for supporting my PhD scholarship
Noise-robust text-dependent speaker identification using cochlear models
One challenging issue in speaker identification (SID) is to achieve noise-robust performance. Humans can accurately identify speakers, even in noisy environments. We can leverage our knowledge of the function and anatomy of the human auditory pathway to design SID systems that achieve better noise-robust performance than conventional approaches. We propose a text-dependent SID system based on a real-time cochlear model called cascade of asymmetric resonators with fast-acting compression (CARFAC). We investigate the SID performance of CARFAC on signals corrupted by noise of various types and levels. We compare its performance with conventional auditory feature generators including mel-frequency cepstrum coefficients, frequency domain linear predictions, as well as another biologically inspired model called the auditory nerve model. We show that CARFAC outperforms other approaches when signals are corrupted by noise. Our results are consistent across datasets, types and levels of noise, different speaking speeds, and back-end classifiers. We show that the noise-robust SID performance of CARFAC is largely due to its nonlinear processing of auditory input signals. Presumably, the human auditory system achieves noise-robust performance via inherent nonlinearities as well
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