175 research outputs found
Speech Enhancement Exploiting the Source-Filter Model
Imagining everyday life without mobile telephony is nowadays hardly possible. Calls are being made in every thinkable situation and environment. Hence, the microphone will not only pick up the user’s speech but also sound from the surroundings which is likely to impede the understanding of the conversational partner. Modern speech enhancement systems are able to mitigate such effects and most users are not even aware of their existence. In this thesis the development of a modern single-channel speech enhancement approach is presented, which uses the divide and conquer principle to combat environmental noise in microphone signals. Though initially motivated by mobile telephony applications, this approach can be applied whenever speech is to be retrieved from a corrupted signal. The approach uses the so-called source-filter model to divide the problem into two subproblems which are then subsequently conquered by enhancing the source (the excitation signal) and the filter (the spectral envelope) separately. Both enhanced signals are then used to denoise the corrupted signal. The estimation of spectral envelopes has quite some history and some approaches already exist for speech enhancement. However, they typically neglect the excitation signal which leads to the inability of enhancing the fine structure properly. Both individual enhancement approaches exploit benefits of the cepstral domain which offers, e.g., advantageous mathematical properties and straightforward synthesis of excitation-like signals. We investigate traditional model-based schemes like Gaussian mixture models (GMMs), classical signal processing-based, as well as modern deep neural network (DNN)-based approaches in this thesis. The enhanced signals are not used directly to enhance the corrupted signal (e.g., to synthesize a clean speech signal) but as so-called a priori signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) estimate in a traditional statistical speech enhancement system. Such a traditional system consists of a noise power estimator, an a priori SNR estimator, and a spectral weighting rule that is usually driven by the results of the aforementioned estimators and subsequently employed to retrieve the clean speech estimate from the noisy observation. As a result the new approach obtains significantly higher noise attenuation compared to current state-of-the-art systems while maintaining a quite comparable speech component quality and speech intelligibility. In consequence, the overall quality of the enhanced speech signal turns out to be superior as compared to state-of-the-art speech ehnahcement approaches.Mobiltelefonie ist aus dem heutigen Leben nicht mehr wegzudenken. Telefonate werden in beliebigen Situationen an beliebigen Orten geführt und dabei nimmt das Mikrofon nicht nur die Sprache des Nutzers auf, sondern auch die Umgebungsgeräusche, welche das Verständnis des Gesprächspartners stark beeinflussen können. Moderne Systeme können durch Sprachverbesserungsalgorithmen solchen Effekten entgegenwirken, dabei ist vielen Nutzern nicht einmal bewusst, dass diese Algorithmen existieren. In dieser Arbeit wird die Entwicklung eines einkanaligen Sprachverbesserungssystems vorgestellt. Der Ansatz setzt auf das Teile-und-herrsche-Verfahren, um störende Umgebungsgeräusche aus Mikrofonsignalen herauszufiltern. Dieses Verfahren kann für sämtliche Fälle angewendet werden, in denen Sprache aus verrauschten Signalen extrahiert werden soll. Der Ansatz nutzt das Quelle-Filter-Modell, um das ursprüngliche Problem in zwei Unterprobleme aufzuteilen, die anschließend gelöst werden, indem die Quelle (das Anregungssignal) und das Filter (die spektrale Einhüllende) separat verbessert werden. Die verbesserten Signale werden gemeinsam genutzt, um das gestörte Mikrofonsignal zu entrauschen. Die Schätzung von spektralen Einhüllenden wurde bereits in der Vergangenheit erforscht und zum Teil auch für die Sprachverbesserung angewandt. Typischerweise wird dabei jedoch das Anregungssignal vernachlässigt, so dass die spektrale Feinstruktur des Mikrofonsignals nicht verbessert werden kann. Beide Ansätze nutzen jeweils die Eigenschaften der cepstralen Domäne, die unter anderem vorteilhafte mathematische Eigenschaften mit sich bringen, sowie die Möglichkeit, Prototypen eines Anregungssignals zu erzeugen. Wir untersuchen modellbasierte Ansätze, wie z.B. Gaußsche Mischmodelle, klassische signalverarbeitungsbasierte Lösungen und auch moderne tiefe neuronale Netzwerke in dieser Arbeit. Die so verbesserten Signale werden nicht direkt zur Sprachsignalverbesserung genutzt (z.B. Sprachsynthese), sondern als sogenannter A-priori-Signal-zu-Rauschleistungs-Schätzwert in einem traditionellen statistischen Sprachverbesserungssystem. Dieses besteht aus einem Störleistungs-Schätzer, einem A-priori-Signal-zu-Rauschleistungs-Schätzer und einer spektralen Gewichtungsregel, die üblicherweise mit Hilfe der Ergebnisse der beiden Schätzer berechnet wird. Schließlich wird eine Schätzung des sauberen Sprachsignals aus der Mikrofonaufnahme gewonnen. Der neue Ansatz bietet eine signifikant höhere Dämpfung des Störgeräuschs als der bisherige Stand der Technik. Dabei wird eine vergleichbare Qualität der Sprachkomponente und der Sprachverständlichkeit gewährleistet. Somit konnte die Gesamtqualität des verbesserten Sprachsignals gegenüber dem Stand der Technik erhöht werden
Oesophageal speech: enrichment and evaluations
167 p.After a laryngectomy (i.e. removal of the larynx) a patient can no more speak in a healthy laryngeal voice. Therefore, they need to adopt alternative methods of speaking such as oesophageal speech. In this method, speech is produced using swallowed air and the vibrations of the pharyngo-oesophageal segment, which introduces several undesired artefacts and an abnormal fundamental frequency. This makes oesophageal speech processing difficult compared to healthy speech, both auditory processing and signal processing. The aim of this thesis is to find solutions to make oesophageal speech signals easier to process, and to evaluate these solutions by exploring a wide range of evaluation metrics.First, some preliminary studies were performed to compare oesophageal speech and healthy speech. This revealed significantly lower intelligibility and higher listening effort for oesophageal speech compared to healthy speech. Intelligibility scores were comparable for familiar and non-familiar listeners of oesophageal speech. However, listeners familiar with oesophageal speech reported less effort compared to non-familiar listeners. In another experiment, oesophageal speech was reported to have more listening effort compared to healthy speech even though its intelligibility was comparable to healthy speech. On investigating neural correlates of listening effort (i.e. alpha power) using electroencephalography, a higher alpha power was observed for oesophageal speech compared to healthy speech, indicating higher listening effort. Additionally, participants with poorer cognitive abilities (i.e. working memory capacity) showed higher alpha power.Next, using several algorithms (preexisting as well as novel approaches), oesophageal speech was transformed with the aim of making it more intelligible and less effortful. The novel approach consisted of a deep neural network based voice conversion system where the source was oesophageal speech and the target was synthetic speech matched in duration with the source oesophageal speech. This helped in eliminating the source-target alignment process which is particularly prone to errors for disordered speech such as oesophageal speech. Both speaker dependent and speaker independent versions of this system were implemented. The outputs of the speaker dependent system had better short term objective intelligibility scores, automatic speech recognition performance and listener preference scores compared to unprocessed oesophageal speech. The speaker independent system had improvement in short term objective intelligibility scores but not in automatic speech recognition performance. Some other signal transformations were also performed to enhance oesophageal speech. These included removal of undesired artefacts and methods to improve fundamental frequency. Out of these methods, only removal of undesired silences had success to some degree (1.44 \% points improvement in automatic speech recognition performance), and that too only for low intelligibility oesophageal speech.Lastly, the output of these transformations were evaluated and compared with previous systems using an ensemble of evaluation metrics such as short term objective intelligibility, automatic speech recognition, subjective listening tests and neural measures obtained using electroencephalography. Results reveal that the proposed neural network based system outperformed previous systems in improving the objective intelligibility and automatic speech recognition performance of oesophageal speech. In the case of subjective evaluations, the results were mixed - some positive improvement in preference scores and no improvement in speech intelligibility and listening effort scores. Overall, the results demonstrate several possibilities and new paths to enrich oesophageal speech using modern machine learning algorithms. The outcomes would be beneficial to the disordered speech community
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Single Channel auditory source separation with neural network
Although distinguishing different sounds in noisy environment is a relative easy task for human, source separation has long been extremely difficult in audio signal processing. The problem is challenging for three reasons: the large variety of sound type, the abundant mixing conditions and the unclear mechanism to distinguish sources, especially for similar sounds.
In recent years, the neural network based methods achieved impressive successes in various problems, including the speech enhancement, where the task is to separate the clean speech out of the noise mixture. However, the current deep learning based source separator does not perform well on real recorded noisy speech, and more importantly, is not applicable in a more general source separation scenario such as overlapped speech.
In this thesis, we firstly propose extensions for the current mask learning network, for the problem of speech enhancement, to fix the scale mismatch problem which is usually occurred in real recording audio. We solve this problem by combining two additional restoration layers in the existing mask learning network. We also proposed a residual learning architecture for the speech enhancement, further improving the network generalization under different recording conditions. We evaluate the proposed speech enhancement models on CHiME 3 data. Without retraining the acoustic model, the best bi-direction LSTM with residue connections yields 25.13% relative WER reduction on real data and 34.03% WER on simulated data.
Then we propose a novel neural network based model called “deep clustering” for more general source separation tasks. We train a deep network to assign contrastive embedding vectors to each time-frequency region of the spectrogram in order to implicitly predict the segmentation labels of the target spectrogram from the input mixtures. This yields a deep network-based analogue to spectral clustering, in that the embeddings form a low-rank pairwise affinity matrix that approximates the ideal affinity matrix, while enabling much faster performance. At test time, the clustering step “decodes” the segmentation implicit in the embeddings by optimizing K-means with respect to the unknown assignments. Experiments on single channel mixtures from multiple speakers show that a speaker-independent model trained on two-speaker and three speakers mixtures can improve signal quality for mixtures of held-out speakers by an average over 10dB.
We then propose an extension for deep clustering named “deep attractor” network that allows the system to perform efficient end-to-end training. In the proposed model, attractor points for each source are firstly created the acoustic signals which pull together the time-frequency bins corresponding to each source by finding the centroids of the sources in the embedding space, which are subsequently used to determine the similarity of each bin in the mixture to each source. The network is then trained to minimize the reconstruction error of each source by optimizing the embeddings. We showed that this frame work can achieve even better results.
Lastly, we introduce two applications of the proposed models, in singing voice separation and the smart hearing aid device. For the former, a multi-task architecture is proposed, which combines the deep clustering and the classification based network. And a new state of the art separation result was achieved, where the signal to noise ratio was improved by 11.1dB on music and 7.9dB on singing voice. In the application of smart hearing aid device, we combine the neural decoding with the separation network. The system firstly decodes the user’s attention, which is further used to guide the separator for the targeting source. Both objective study and subjective study show the proposed system can accurately decode the attention and significantly improve the user experience
Single-Microphone Speech Enhancement and Separation Using Deep Learning
The cocktail party problem comprises the challenging task of understanding a
speech signal in a complex acoustic environment, where multiple speakers and
background noise signals simultaneously interfere with the speech signal of
interest. A signal processing algorithm that can effectively increase the
speech intelligibility and quality of speech signals in such complicated
acoustic situations is highly desirable. Especially for applications involving
mobile communication devices and hearing assistive devices. Due to the
re-emergence of machine learning techniques, today, known as deep learning, the
challenges involved with such algorithms might be overcome. In this PhD thesis,
we study and develop deep learning-based techniques for two sub-disciplines of
the cocktail party problem: single-microphone speech enhancement and
single-microphone multi-talker speech separation. Specifically, we conduct
in-depth empirical analysis of the generalizability capability of modern deep
learning-based single-microphone speech enhancement algorithms. We show that
performance of such algorithms is closely linked to the training data, and good
generalizability can be achieved with carefully designed training data.
Furthermore, we propose uPIT, a deep learning-based algorithm for
single-microphone speech separation and we report state-of-the-art results on a
speaker-independent multi-talker speech separation task. Additionally, we show
that uPIT works well for joint speech separation and enhancement without
explicit prior knowledge about the noise type or number of speakers. Finally,
we show that deep learning-based speech enhancement algorithms designed to
minimize the classical short-time spectral amplitude mean squared error leads
to enhanced speech signals which are essentially optimal in terms of STOI, a
state-of-the-art speech intelligibility estimator.Comment: PhD Thesis. 233 page
Replay detection in voice biometrics: an investigation of adaptive and non-adaptive front-ends
Among various physiological and behavioural traits, speech has gained popularity as an effective mode of biometric authentication. Even though they are gaining popularity, automatic speaker verification systems are vulnerable to malicious attacks, known as spoofing attacks. Among various types of spoofing attacks, replay attack poses the biggest threat due to its simplicity and effectiveness. This thesis investigates the importance of 1) improving front-end feature extraction via novel feature extraction techniques and 2) enhancing spectral components via adaptive front-end frameworks to improve replay attack detection.
This thesis initially focuses on AM-FM modelling techniques and their use in replay attack detection. A novel method to extract the sub-band frequency modulation (FM) component using the spectral centroid of a signal is proposed, and its use as a potential acoustic feature is also discussed. Frequency Domain Linear Prediction (FDLP) is explored as a method to obtain the temporal envelope of a speech signal. The temporal envelope carries amplitude modulation (AM) information of speech resonances. Several features are extracted from the temporal envelope and the FDLP residual signal. These features are then evaluated for replay attack detection and shown to have significant capability in discriminating genuine and spoofed signals. Fusion of AM and FM-based features has shown that AM and FM carry complementary information that helps distinguish replayed signals from genuine ones. The importance of frequency band allocation when creating filter banks is studied as well to further advance the understanding of front-ends for replay attack detection.
Mechanisms inspired by the human auditory system that makes the human ear an excellent spectrum analyser have been investigated and integrated into front-ends. Spatial differentiation, a mechanism that provides additional sharpening to auditory filters is one of them that is used in this work to improve the selectivity of the sub-band decomposition filters. Two features are extracted using the improved filter bank front-end: spectral envelope centroid magnitude (SECM) and spectral envelope centroid frequency (SECF). These are used to establish the positive effect of spatial differentiation on discriminating spoofed signals. Level-dependent filter tuning, which allows the ear to handle a large dynamic range, is integrated into the filter bank to further improve the front-end. This mechanism converts the filter bank into an adaptive one where the selectivity of the filters is varied based on the input signal energy. Experimental results show that this leads to improved spoofing detection performance.
Finally, deep neural network (DNN) mechanisms are integrated into sub-band feature extraction to develop an adaptive front-end that adjusts its characteristics based on the sub-band signals. A DNN-based controller that takes sub-band FM components as input, is developed to adaptively control the selectivity and sensitivity of a parallel filter bank to enhance the artifacts that differentiate a replayed signal from a genuine signal. This work illustrates gradient-based optimization of a DNN-based controller using the feedback from a spoofing detection back-end classifier, thus training it to reduce spoofing detection error. The proposed framework has displayed a superior ability in identifying high-quality replayed signals compared to conventional non-adaptive frameworks.
All techniques proposed in this thesis have been evaluated on well-established databases on replay attack detection and compared with state-of-the-art baseline systems
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