25 research outputs found

    Patrol team language identification system for DARPA RATS P1 evaluation

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    This paper describes the language identification (LID) system developed by the Patrol team for the first phase of the DARPA RATS (Robust Automatic Transcription of Speech) program, which seeks to advance state of the art detection capabilities on audio from highly degraded communication channels. We show that techniques originally developed for LID on telephone speech (e.g., for the NIST language recognition evaluations) remain effective on the noisy RATS data, provided that careful consideration is applied when designing the training and development sets. In addition, we show significant improvements from the use of Wiener filtering, neural network based and language dependent i-vector modeling, and fusion

    Frame-level features conveying phonetic information for language and speaker recognition

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    150 p.This Thesis, developed in the Software Technologies Working Group of the Departmentof Electricity and Electronics of the University of the Basque Country, focuseson the research eld of spoken language and speaker recognition technologies.More specically, the research carried out studies the design of a set of featuresconveying spectral acoustic and phonotactic information, searches for the optimalfeature extraction parameters, and analyses the integration and usage of the featuresin language recognition systems, and the complementarity of these approacheswith regard to state-of-the-art systems. The study reveals that systems trained onthe proposed set of features, denoted as Phone Log-Likelihood Ratios (PLLRs), arehighly competitive, outperforming in several benchmarks other state-of-the-art systems.Moreover, PLLR-based systems also provide complementary information withregard to other phonotactic and acoustic approaches, which makes them suitable infusions to improve the overall performance of spoken language recognition systems.The usage of this features is also studied in speaker recognition tasks. In this context,the results attained by the approaches based on PLLR features are not as remarkableas the ones of systems based on standard acoustic features, but they still providecomplementary information that can be used to enhance the overall performance ofthe speaker recognition systems

    Robust Anomaly Detection with Applications to Acoustics and Graphs

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    Our goal is to develop a robust anomaly detector that can be incorporated into pattern recognition systems that may need to learn, but will never be shunned for making egregious errors. The ability to know what we do not know is a concept often overlooked when developing classifiers to discriminate between different types of normal data in controlled experiments. We believe that an anomaly detector should be used to produce warnings in real applications when operating conditions change dramatically, especially when other classifiers only have a fixed set of bad candidates from which to choose. Our approach to distributional anomaly detection is to gather local information using features tailored to the domain, aggregate all such evidence to form a global density estimate, and then compare it to a model of normal data. A good match to a recognizable distribution is not required. By design, this process can detect the "unknown unknowns" [1] and properly react to the "black swan events" [2] that can have devastating effects on other systems. We demonstrate that our system is robust to anomalies that may not be well-defined or well-understood even if they have contaminated the training data that is assumed to be non-anomalous. In order to develop a more robust speech activity detector, we reformulate the problem to include acoustic anomaly detection and demonstrate state-of-the-art performance using simple distribution modeling techniques that can be used at incredibly high speed. We begin by demonstrating our approach when training on purely normal conversational speech and then remove all annotation from our training data and demonstrate that our techniques can robustly accommodate anomalous training data contamination. When comparing continuous distributions in higher dimensions, we develop a novel method of discarding portions of a semi-parametric model to form a robust estimate of the Kullback-Leibler divergence. Finally, we demonstrate the generality of our approach by using the divergence between distributions of vertex invariants as a graph distance metric and achieve state-of-the-art performance when detecting graph anomalies with neighborhoods of excessive or negligible connectivity. [1] D. Rumsfeld. (2002) Transcript: DoD news briefing - Secretary Rumsfeld and Gen. Myers. [2] N. N. Taleb, The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. Random House, 2007

    Deep learning for i-vector speaker and language recognition

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    Over the last few years, i-vectors have been the state-of-the-art technique in speaker and language recognition. Recent advances in Deep Learning (DL) technology have improved the quality of i-vectors but the DL techniques in use are computationally expensive and need speaker or/and phonetic labels for the background data, which are not easily accessible in practice. On the other hand, the lack of speaker-labeled background data makes a big performance gap, in speaker recognition, between two well-known cosine and Probabilistic Linear Discriminant Analysis (PLDA) i-vector scoring techniques. It has recently been a challenge how to fill this gap without speaker labels, which are expensive in practice. Although some unsupervised clustering techniques are proposed to estimate the speaker labels, they cannot accurately estimate the labels. This thesis tries to solve the problems above by using the DL technology in different ways, without any need of speaker or phonetic labels. In order to fill the performance gap between cosine and PLDA scoring given unlabeled background data, we have proposed an impostor selection algorithm and a universal model adaptation process in a hybrid system based on Deep Belief Networks (DBNs) and Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) to discriminatively model each target speaker. In order to have more insight into the behavior of DL techniques in both single and multi-session speaker enrollment tasks, some experiments have been carried out in both scenarios. Experiments on the National Institute of Standard and Technology (NIST) 2014 i-vector challenge show that 46% of this performance gap, in terms of minDCF, is filled by the proposed DL-based system. Furthermore, the score combination of the proposed DL-based system and PLDA with estimated labels covers 79% of this gap. In the second line of the research, we have developed an efficient alternative vector representation of speech by keeping the computational cost as low as possible and avoiding phonetic labels, which are not always accessible. The proposed vectors will be based on both Gaussian Mixture Models (GMMs) and Restricted Boltzmann Machines (RBMs) and will be referred to as GMM-RBM vectors. The role of RBM is to learn the total speaker and session variability among background GMM supervectors. This RBM, which will be referred to as Universal RBM (URBM), will then be used to transform unseen supervectors to the proposed low dimensional vectors. The use of different activation functions for training the URBM and different transformation functions for extracting the proposed vectors are investigated. At the end, a variant of Rectified Linear Unit (ReLU) which is referred to as Variable ReLU (VReLU) is proposed. Experiments on the core test condition 5 of the NIST Speaker Recognition Evaluation (SRE) 2010 show that comparable results with conventional i-vectors are achieved with a clearly lower computational load in the vector extraction process. Finally, for the Language Identification (LID) application, we have proposed a DNN architecture to model effectively the i-vector space of four languages, English, Spanish, German, and Finnish, in the car environment. Both raw i-vectors and session variability compensated i-vectors are evaluated as input vectors to DNN. The performance of the proposed DNN architecture is compared with both conventional GMM-UBM and i-vector/Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) systems considering the effect of duration of signals. It is shown that the signals with duration between 2 and 3 sec meet the accuracy and speed requirements of this application, in which the proposed DNN architecture outperforms GMM-UBM and i-vector/LDA systems by 37% and 28%, respectively.En los últimos años, los i-vectores han sido la técnica de referencia en el reconocimiento de hablantes y de idioma. Los últimos avances en la tecnología de Aprendizaje Profundo (Deep Learning. DL) han mejorado la calidad de los i-vectores, pero las técnicas DL en uso son computacionalmente costosas y necesitan datos etiquetados para cada hablante y/o unidad fon ética, los cuales no son fácilmente accesibles en la práctica. La falta de datos etiquetados provoca una gran diferencia de los resultados en el reconocimiento de hablante con i-vectors entre las dos técnicas de evaluación más utilizados: distancia coseno y Análisis Lineal Discriminante Probabilístico (PLDA). Por el momento, sigue siendo un reto cómo reducir esta brecha sin disponer de las etiquetas de los hablantes, que son costosas de obtener. Aunque se han propuesto algunas técnicas de agrupamiento sin supervisión para estimar las etiquetas de los hablantes, no pueden estimar las etiquetas con precisión. Esta tesis trata de resolver los problemas mencionados usando la tecnología DL de diferentes maneras, sin necesidad de etiquetas de hablante o fon éticas. Con el fin de reducir la diferencia de resultados entre distancia coseno y PLDA a partir de datos no etiquetados, hemos propuesto un algoritmo selección de impostores y la adaptación a un modelo universal en un sistema hibrido basado en Deep Belief Networks (DBN) y Deep Neural Networks (DNN) para modelar a cada hablante objetivo de forma discriminativa. Con el fin de tener más información sobre el comportamiento de las técnicas DL en las tareas de identificación de hablante en una única sesión y en varias sesiones, se han llevado a cabo algunos experimentos en ambos escenarios. Los experimentos utilizando los datos del National Institute of Standard and Technology (NIST) 2014 i-vector Challenge muestran que el 46% de esta diferencia de resultados, en términos de minDCF, se reduce con el sistema propuesto basado en DL. Además, la combinación de evaluaciones del sistema propuesto basado en DL y PLDA con etiquetas estimadas reduce el 79% de esta diferencia. En la segunda línea de la investigación, hemos desarrollado una representación vectorial alternativa eficiente de la voz manteniendo el coste computacional lo más bajo posible y evitando las etiquetas fon éticas, Los vectores propuestos se basan tanto en el Modelo de Mezcla de Gaussianas (GMM) y en las Maquinas Boltzmann Restringidas (RBM), a los que se hacer referencia como vectores GMM-RBM. El papel de la RBM es aprender la variabilidad total del hablante y de la sesión entre los supervectores del GMM gen érico. Este RBM, al que se hará referencia como RBM Universal (URBM), se utilizará para transformar supervectores ocultos en los vectores propuestos, de menor dimensión. Además, se estudia el uso de diferentes funciones de activación para el entrenamiento de la URBM y diferentes funciones de transformación para extraer los vectores propuestos. Finalmente, se propone una variante de la Unidad Lineal Rectificada (ReLU) a la que se hace referencia como Variable ReLU (VReLU). Los experimentos sobre los datos de la condición 5 del test de la NIST Speaker Recognition Evaluation (SRE) 2010 muestran que se han conseguidos resultados comparables con los i-vectores convencionales, con una carga computacional claramente inferior en el proceso de extracción de vectores. Por último, para la aplicación de Identificación de Idioma (LID), hemos propuesto una arquitectura DNN para modelar eficazmente en el entorno del coche el espacio i-vector de cuatro idiomas: inglés, español, alemán y finlandés. Tanto los i-vectores originales como los i-vectores propuestos son evaluados como vectores de entrada a DNN. El rendimiento de la arquitectura DNN propuesta se compara con los sistemas convencionales GMM-UBM y i-vector/Análisis Discriminante Lineal (LDA) considerando el efecto de la duración de las señales. Se muestra que en caso de señales con una duración entre 2 y 3 se obtienen resultados satisfactorios en cuanto a precisión y resultados, superando a los sistemas GMM-UBM y i-vector/LDA en un 37% y 28%, respectivament

    Reports to the President

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    A compilation of annual reports for the 1999-2000 academic year, including a report from the President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as well as reports from the academic and administrative units of the Institute. The reports outline the year's goals, accomplishments, honors and awards, and future plans

    Air Traffic Management Abbreviation Compendium

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    As in all fields of work, an unmanageable number of abbreviations are used today in aviation for terms, definitions, commands, standards and technical descriptions. This applies in general to the areas of aeronautical communication, navigation and surveillance, cockpit and air traffic control working positions, passenger and cargo transport, and all other areas of flight planning, organization and guidance. In addition, many abbreviations are used more than once or have different meanings in different languages. In order to obtain an overview of the most common abbreviations used in air traffic management, organizations like EUROCONTROL, FAA, DWD and DLR have published lists of abbreviations in the past, which have also been enclosed in this document. In addition, abbreviations from some larger international projects related to aviation have been included to provide users with a directory as complete as possible. This means that the second edition of the Air Traffic Management Abbreviation Compendium includes now around 16,500 abbreviations and acronyms from the field of aviation

    Research and technology, 1992

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    Selected research and technology activities at Ames Research Center, including the Moffett Field site and the Dryden Flight Research Facility, are summarized. These activities exemplify the Center's varied and productive research efforts for 1992

    Subspace Gaussian Mixture Models for Language Identification and Dysarthric Speech Intelligibility Assessment

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    En esta Tesis se ha investigado la aplicación de técnicas de modelado de subespacios de mezclas de Gaussianas en dos problemas relacionados con las tecnologías del habla, como son la identificación automática de idioma (LID, por sus siglas en inglés) y la evaluación automática de inteligibilidad en el habla de personas con disartria. Una de las técnicas más importantes estudiadas es el análisis factorial conjunto (JFA, por sus siglas en inglés). JFA es, en esencia, un modelo de mezclas de Gaussianas en el que la media de cada componente se expresa como una suma de factores de dimensión reducida, y donde cada factor representa una contribución diferente a la señal de audio. Esta factorización nos permite compensar nuestros modelos frente a contribuciones indeseadas presentes en la señal, como la información de canal. JFA se ha investigado como clasficador y como extractor de parámetros. En esta última aproximación se modela un solo factor que representa todas las contribuciones presentes en la señal. Los puntos en este subespacio se denominan i-Vectors. Así, un i-Vector es un vector de baja dimensión que representa una grabación de audio. Los i-Vectors han resultado ser muy útiles como vector de características para representar señales en diferentes problemas relacionados con el aprendizaje de máquinas. En relación al problema de LID, se han investigado dos sistemas diferentes de acuerdo al tipo de información extraída de la señal. En el primero, la señal se parametriza en vectores acústicos con información espectral a corto plazo. En este caso, observamos mejoras de hasta un 50% con el sistema basado en i-Vectors respecto al sistema que utilizaba JFA como clasificador. Se comprobó que el subespacio de canal del modelo JFA también contenía información del idioma, mientras que con los i-Vectors no se descarta ningún tipo de información, y además, son útiles para mitigar diferencias entre los datos de entrenamiento y de evaluación. En la fase de clasificación, los i-Vectors de cada idioma se modelaron con una distribución Gaussiana en la que la matriz de covarianza era común para todos. Este método es simple y rápido, y no requiere de ningún post-procesado de los i-Vectors. En el segundo sistema, se introdujo el uso de información prosódica y formántica en un sistema de LID basado en i-Vectors. La precisión de éste estaba por debajo de la del sistema acústico. Sin embargo, los dos sistemas son complementarios, y se obtuvo hasta un 20% de mejora con la fusión de los dos respecto al sistema acústico solo. Tras los buenos resultados obtenidos para LID, y dado que, teóricamente, los i-Vectors capturan toda la información presente en la señal, decidimos usarlos para la evaluar de manera automática la inteligibilidad en el habla de personas con disartria. Los logopedas están muy interesados en esta tecnología porque permitiría evaluar a sus pacientes de una manera objetiva y consistente. En este caso, los i-Vectors se obtuvieron a partir de información espectral a corto plazo de la señal, y la inteligibilidad se calculó a partir de los i-Vectors obtenidos para un conjunto de palabras dichas por el locutor evaluado. Comprobamos que los resultados eran mucho mejores si en el entrenamiento del sistema se incorporaban datos de la persona que iba a ser evaluada. No obstante, esta limitación podría aliviarse utilizando una mayor cantidad de datos para entrenar el sistema.In this Thesis, we investigated how to effciently apply subspace Gaussian mixture modeling techniques onto two speech technology problems, namely automatic spoken language identification (LID) and automatic intelligibility assessment of dysarthric speech. One of the most important of such techniques in this Thesis was joint factor analysis (JFA). JFA is essentially a Gaussian mixture model where the mean of the components is expressed as a sum of low-dimension factors that represent different contributions to the speech signal. This factorization makes it possible to compensate for undesired sources of variability, like the channel. JFA was investigated as final classiffer and as feature extractor. In the latter approach, a single subspace including all sources of variability is trained, and points in this subspace are known as i-Vectors. Thus, one i-Vector is defined as a low-dimension representation of a single utterance, and they are a very powerful feature for different machine learning problems. We have investigated two different LID systems according to the type of features extracted from speech. First, we extracted acoustic features representing short-time spectral information. In this case, we observed relative improvements with i-Vectors with respect to JFA of up to 50%. We realized that the channel subspace in a JFA model also contains language information whereas i-Vectors do not discard any language information, and moreover, they help to reduce mismatches between training and testing data. For classification, we modeled the i-Vectors of each language with a Gaussian distribution with covariance matrix shared among languages. This method is simple and fast, and it worked well without any post-processing. Second, we introduced the use of prosodic and formant information with the i-Vectors system. The performance was below the acoustic system but both were found to be complementary and we obtained up to a 20% relative improvement with the fusion with respect to the acoustic system alone. Given the success in LID and the fact that i-Vectors capture all the information that is present in the data, we decided to use i-Vectors for other tasks, specifically, the assessment of speech intelligibility in speakers with different types of dysarthria. Speech therapists are very interested in this technology because it would allow them to objectively and consistently rate the intelligibility of their patients. In this case, the input features were extracted from short-term spectral information, and the intelligibility was assessed from the i-Vectors calculated from a set of words uttered by the tested speaker. We found that the performance was clearly much better if we had available data for training of the person that would use the application. We think that this limitation could be relaxed if we had larger databases for training. However, the recording process is not easy for people with disabilities, and it is difficult to obtain large datasets of dysarthric speakers open to the research community. Finally, the same system architecture for intelligibility assessment based on i-Vectors was used for predicting the accuracy that an automatic speech recognizer (ASR) system would obtain with dysarthric speakers. The only difference between both was the ground truth label set used for training. Predicting the performance response of an ASR system would increase the confidence of speech therapists in these systems and would diminish health related costs. The results were not as satisfactory as in the previous case, probably because an ASR is a complex system whose accuracy can be very difficult to be predicted only with acoustic information. Nonetheless, we think that we opened a door to an interesting research direction for the two problems

    RFID Technology in Intelligent Tracking Systems in Construction Waste Logistics Using Optimisation Techniques

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    Construction waste disposal is an urgent issue for protecting our environment. This paper proposes a waste management system and illustrates the work process using plasterboard waste as an example, which creates a hazardous gas when land filled with household waste, and for which the recycling rate is less than 10% in the UK. The proposed system integrates RFID technology, Rule-Based Reasoning, Ant Colony optimization and knowledge technology for auditing and tracking plasterboard waste, guiding the operation staff, arranging vehicles, schedule planning, and also provides evidence to verify its disposal. It h relies on RFID equipment for collecting logistical data and uses digital imaging equipment to give further evidence; the reasoning core in the third layer is responsible for generating schedules and route plans and guidance, and the last layer delivers the result to inform users. The paper firstly introduces the current plasterboard disposal situation and addresses the logistical problem that is now the main barrier to a higher recycling rate, followed by discussion of the proposed system in terms of both system level structure and process structure. And finally, an example scenario will be given to illustrate the system’s utilization

    Aerospace Medicine and Biology: 1983 cumulative index

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    This publication is a cumulative index to the abstracts contained in the Supplements 242 through 253 of Aerospace Medicine and Biology: A Continuing Bibliography. It includes six indexes--subject, personal author, corporate source, contract number, report number, and accession number
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