3,381 research outputs found
MISEP - Linear and Nonlinear ICA Based on Mutual Information
MISEP is a method for linear and nonlinear ICA, that is able to handle a large variety of situations. It is an extension of the well known INFOMAX method, in two directions: (1) handling of nonlinear mixtures, and (2) learning the nonlinearities to be used at the outputs. The method can therefore separate linear and nonlinear mixtures of components with a wide range of statistical distributions.
This paper presents the basis of the MISEP method, as well as experimental results obtained with it. The results illustrate the applicability of the method to various situations, and show that, although the nonlinear blind separation problem is ill-posed, use of regularization allows the problem to be solved when the nonlinear mixture is relatively smooth
Foreground-Background Ambient Sound Scene Separation
Ambient sound scenes typically comprise multiple short events occurring on
top of a somewhat stationary background. We consider the task of separating
these events from the background, which we call foreground-background ambient
sound scene separation. We propose a deep learning-based separation framework
with a suitable feature normaliza-tion scheme and an optional auxiliary network
capturing the background statistics, and we investigate its ability to handle
the great variety of sound classes encountered in ambient sound scenes, which
have often not been seen in training. To do so, we create single-channel
foreground-background mixtures using isolated sounds from the DESED and
Audioset datasets, and we conduct extensive experiments with mixtures of seen
or unseen sound classes at various signal-to-noise ratios. Our experimental
findings demonstrate the generalization ability of the proposed approach
Blind separation of underdetermined mixtures with additive white and pink noises
This paper presents an approach for underdetermined
blind source separation in the case of additive Gaussian
white noise and pink noise. Likewise, the proposed approach is applicable in the case of separating I + 3 sources from I mixtures with additive two kinds of noises. This situation is more challenging and suitable to practical real world problems. Moreover, unlike to some conventional approaches, the sparsity conditions are not imposed. Firstly, the mixing matrix is estimated based on an algorithm that combines short time Fourier transform and rough-fuzzy clustering. Then, the mixed
signals are normalized and the source signals are recovered using modified Gradient descent Local Hierarchical Alternating Least Squares Algorithm exploiting the mixing matrix obtained from the previous step as an input and initialized by multiplicative algorithm for matrix factorization based on alpha divergence. The experiments and simulation results
show that the proposed approach can separate I + 3 source
signals from I mixed signals, and it has superior evaluation performance compared to some conventional approaches
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