4,875 research outputs found
Feature extraction based on bio-inspired model for robust emotion recognition
Emotional state identification is an important issue to achieve more natural speech interactive systems. Ideally, these systems should also be able to work in real environments in which generally exist some kind of noise. Several bio-inspired representations have been applied to artificial systems for speech processing under noise conditions. In this work, an auditory signal representation is used to obtain a novel bio-inspired set of features for emotional speech signals. These characteristics, together with other spectral and prosodic features, are used for emotion recognition under noise conditions. Neural models were trained as classifiers and results were compared to the well-known mel-frequency cepstral coefficients. Results show that using the proposed representations, it is possible to significantly improve the robustness of an emotion recognition system. The results were also validated in a speaker independent scheme and with two emotional speech corpora.Fil: Albornoz, Enrique Marcelo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de IngenierÃa y Ciencias HÃdricas. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional; ArgentinaFil: Milone, Diego Humberto. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de IngenierÃa y Ciencias HÃdricas. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional; ArgentinaFil: Rufiner, Hugo Leonardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientÃficas y Técnicas. Centro CientÃfico Tecnológico Conicet - Santa Fe. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de IngenierÃa y Ciencias HÃdricas. Instituto de Investigación en Señales, Sistemas e Inteligencia Computacional; Argentin
Learning sound representations using trainable COPE feature extractors
Sound analysis research has mainly been focused on speech and music
processing. The deployed methodologies are not suitable for analysis of sounds
with varying background noise, in many cases with very low signal-to-noise
ratio (SNR). In this paper, we present a method for the detection of patterns
of interest in audio signals. We propose novel trainable feature extractors,
which we call COPE (Combination of Peaks of Energy). The structure of a COPE
feature extractor is determined using a single prototype sound pattern in an
automatic configuration process, which is a type of representation learning. We
construct a set of COPE feature extractors, configured on a number of training
patterns. Then we take their responses to build feature vectors that we use in
combination with a classifier to detect and classify patterns of interest in
audio signals. We carried out experiments on four public data sets: MIVIA audio
events, MIVIA road events, ESC-10 and TU Dortmund data sets. The results that
we achieved (recognition rate equal to 91.71% on the MIVIA audio events, 94% on
the MIVIA road events, 81.25% on the ESC-10 and 94.27% on the TU Dortmund)
demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method and are higher than the
ones obtained by other existing approaches. The COPE feature extractors have
high robustness to variations of SNR. Real-time performance is achieved even
when the value of a large number of features is computed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Pattern Recognitio
EM Algorithms for Weighted-Data Clustering with Application to Audio-Visual Scene Analysis
Data clustering has received a lot of attention and numerous methods,
algorithms and software packages are available. Among these techniques,
parametric finite-mixture models play a central role due to their interesting
mathematical properties and to the existence of maximum-likelihood estimators
based on expectation-maximization (EM). In this paper we propose a new mixture
model that associates a weight with each observed point. We introduce the
weighted-data Gaussian mixture and we derive two EM algorithms. The first one
considers a fixed weight for each observation. The second one treats each
weight as a random variable following a gamma distribution. We propose a model
selection method based on a minimum message length criterion, provide a weight
initialization strategy, and validate the proposed algorithms by comparing them
with several state of the art parametric and non-parametric clustering
techniques. We also demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of the
proposed clustering technique in the presence of heterogeneous data, namely
audio-visual scene analysis.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, 4 table
Permutation Invariant Training of Deep Models for Speaker-Independent Multi-talker Speech Separation
We propose a novel deep learning model, which supports permutation invariant
training (PIT), for speaker independent multi-talker speech separation,
commonly known as the cocktail-party problem. Different from most of the prior
arts that treat speech separation as a multi-class regression problem and the
deep clustering technique that considers it a segmentation (or clustering)
problem, our model optimizes for the separation regression error, ignoring the
order of mixing sources. This strategy cleverly solves the long-lasting label
permutation problem that has prevented progress on deep learning based
techniques for speech separation. Experiments on the equal-energy mixing setup
of a Danish corpus confirms the effectiveness of PIT. We believe improvements
built upon PIT can eventually solve the cocktail-party problem and enable
real-world adoption of, e.g., automatic meeting transcription and multi-party
human-computer interaction, where overlapping speech is common.Comment: 5 page
SALSA: A Novel Dataset for Multimodal Group Behavior Analysis
Studying free-standing conversational groups (FCGs) in unstructured social
settings (e.g., cocktail party ) is gratifying due to the wealth of information
available at the group (mining social networks) and individual (recognizing
native behavioral and personality traits) levels. However, analyzing social
scenes involving FCGs is also highly challenging due to the difficulty in
extracting behavioral cues such as target locations, their speaking activity
and head/body pose due to crowdedness and presence of extreme occlusions. To
this end, we propose SALSA, a novel dataset facilitating multimodal and
Synergetic sociAL Scene Analysis, and make two main contributions to research
on automated social interaction analysis: (1) SALSA records social interactions
among 18 participants in a natural, indoor environment for over 60 minutes,
under the poster presentation and cocktail party contexts presenting
difficulties in the form of low-resolution images, lighting variations,
numerous occlusions, reverberations and interfering sound sources; (2) To
alleviate these problems we facilitate multimodal analysis by recording the
social interplay using four static surveillance cameras and sociometric badges
worn by each participant, comprising the microphone, accelerometer, bluetooth
and infrared sensors. In addition to raw data, we also provide annotations
concerning individuals' personality as well as their position, head, body
orientation and F-formation information over the entire event duration. Through
extensive experiments with state-of-the-art approaches, we show (a) the
limitations of current methods and (b) how the recorded multiple cues
synergetically aid automatic analysis of social interactions. SALSA is
available at http://tev.fbk.eu/salsa.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
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