46,391 research outputs found
Time-Contrastive Learning Based Deep Bottleneck Features for Text-Dependent Speaker Verification
There are a number of studies about extraction of bottleneck (BN) features
from deep neural networks (DNNs)trained to discriminate speakers, pass-phrases
and triphone states for improving the performance of text-dependent speaker
verification (TD-SV). However, a moderate success has been achieved. A recent
study [1] presented a time contrastive learning (TCL) concept to explore the
non-stationarity of brain signals for classification of brain states. Speech
signals have similar non-stationarity property, and TCL further has the
advantage of having no need for labeled data. We therefore present a TCL based
BN feature extraction method. The method uniformly partitions each speech
utterance in a training dataset into a predefined number of multi-frame
segments. Each segment in an utterance corresponds to one class, and class
labels are shared across utterances. DNNs are then trained to discriminate all
speech frames among the classes to exploit the temporal structure of speech. In
addition, we propose a segment-based unsupervised clustering algorithm to
re-assign class labels to the segments. TD-SV experiments were conducted on the
RedDots challenge database. The TCL-DNNs were trained using speech data of
fixed pass-phrases that were excluded from the TD-SV evaluation set, so the
learned features can be considered phrase-independent. We compare the
performance of the proposed TCL bottleneck (BN) feature with those of
short-time cepstral features and BN features extracted from DNNs discriminating
speakers, pass-phrases, speaker+pass-phrase, as well as monophones whose labels
and boundaries are generated by three different automatic speech recognition
(ASR) systems. Experimental results show that the proposed TCL-BN outperforms
cepstral features and speaker+pass-phrase discriminant BN features, and its
performance is on par with those of ASR derived BN features. Moreover,....Comment: Copyright (c) 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted.
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Robust Speaker Recognition Using Speech Enhancement And Attention Model
In this paper, a novel architecture for speaker recognition is proposed by
cascading speech enhancement and speaker processing. Its aim is to improve
speaker recognition performance when speech signals are corrupted by noise.
Instead of individually processing speech enhancement and speaker recognition,
the two modules are integrated into one framework by a joint optimisation using
deep neural networks. Furthermore, to increase robustness against noise, a
multi-stage attention mechanism is employed to highlight the speaker related
features learned from context information in time and frequency domain. To
evaluate speaker identification and verification performance of the proposed
approach, we test it on the dataset of VoxCeleb1, one of mostly used benchmark
datasets. Moreover, the robustness of our proposed approach is also tested on
VoxCeleb1 data when being corrupted by three types of interferences, general
noise, music, and babble, at different signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) levels. The
obtained results show that the proposed approach using speech enhancement and
multi-stage attention models outperforms two strong baselines not using them in
most acoustic conditions in our experiments.Comment: Acceptted by Odyssey 202
Anti-spoofing Methods for Automatic SpeakerVerification System
Growing interest in automatic speaker verification (ASV)systems has lead to
significant quality improvement of spoofing attackson them. Many research works
confirm that despite the low equal er-ror rate (EER) ASV systems are still
vulnerable to spoofing attacks. Inthis work we overview different acoustic
feature spaces and classifiersto determine reliable and robust countermeasures
against spoofing at-tacks. We compared several spoofing detection systems,
presented so far,on the development and evaluation datasets of the Automatic
SpeakerVerification Spoofing and Countermeasures (ASVspoof) Challenge
2015.Experimental results presented in this paper demonstrate that the useof
magnitude and phase information combination provides a substantialinput into
the efficiency of the spoofing detection systems. Also wavelet-based features
show impressive results in terms of equal error rate. Inour overview we compare
spoofing performance for systems based on dif-ferent classifiers. Comparison
results demonstrate that the linear SVMclassifier outperforms the conventional
GMM approach. However, manyresearchers inspired by the great success of deep
neural networks (DNN)approaches in the automatic speech recognition, applied
DNN in thespoofing detection task and obtained quite low EER for known and
un-known type of spoofing attacks.Comment: 12 pages, 0 figures, published in Springer Communications in Computer
and Information Science (CCIS) vol. 66
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