3 research outputs found

    Structured Sparsity Models for Reverberant Speech Separation

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    We tackle the multi-party speech recovery problem through modeling the acoustic of the reverberant chambers. Our approach exploits structured sparsity models to perform room modeling and speech recovery. We propose a scheme for characterizing the room acoustic from the unknown competing speech sources relying on localization of the early images of the speakers by sparse approximation of the spatial spectra of the virtual sources in a free-space model. The images are then clustered exploiting the low-rank structure of the spectro-temporal components belonging to each source. This enables us to identify the early support of the room impulse response function and its unique map to the room geometry. To further tackle the ambiguity of the reflection ratios, we propose a novel formulation of the reverberation model and estimate the absorption coefficients through a convex optimization exploiting joint sparsity model formulated upon spatio-spectral sparsity of concurrent speech representation. The acoustic parameters are then incorporated for separating individual speech signals through either structured sparse recovery or inverse filtering the acoustic channels. The experiments conducted on real data recordings demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach for multi-party speech recovery and recognition

    Computational Methods for Underdetermined Convolutive Speech Localization and Separation via Model-based Sparse Component Analysis

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    In this paper, the problem of speech source localization and separation from recordings of convolutive underdetermined mixtures is studied. The problem is cast as recovering the spatio-spectral speech information embedded in a microphone array compressed measurements of the acoustic field. A model-based sparse component analysis framework is formulated for sparse reconstruction of the speech spectra in a reverberant acoustic resulting in joint localization and separation of the individual sources. We compare and contrast the computational approaches to model-based sparse recovery exploiting spatial sparsity as well as spectral structures underlying spectrographic representation of speech signals. In this context, we explore identification of the sparsity structures at the auditory and acoustic representation spaces. The auditory structures are formulated upon the principles of structural grouping based on proximity, autoregressive correlation and harmonicity of the spectral coefficients and they are incorporated for sparse reconstruction. The acoustic structures are formulated upon the image model of multipath propagation and they are exploited to characterize the compressive measurement matrix associated with microphone array recordings. Three approaches to sparse recovery relying on combinatorial optimization, convex relaxation and Bayesian methods are studied and evaluated based on thorough experiments. The sparse Bayesian learning method is shown to yield better perceptual quality while the interference suppression is also achieved using the combinatorial approach with the advantage of offering the most efficient computational cost. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that an average autoregressive model can be learned for speech localization and exploiting the proximity structure in the form of block sparse coefficients enables accurate localization. Throughout the extensive empirical evaluation, we confirm that a large and random placement of the microphones enables significant improvement in source localization and separation performance

    Single channel overlapped-speech detection and separation of spontaneous conversations

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    PhD ThesisIn the thesis, spontaneous conversation containing both speech mixture and speech dialogue is considered. The speech mixture refers to speakers speaking simultaneously (i.e. the overlapped-speech). The speech dialogue refers to only one speaker is actively speaking and the other is silent. That Input conversation is firstly processed by the overlapped-speech detection. Two output signals are then segregated into dialogue and mixture formats. The dialogue is processed by speaker diarization. Its outputs are the individual speech of each speaker. The mixture is processed by speech separation. Its outputs are independent separated speech signals of the speaker. When the separation input contains only the mixture, blind speech separation approach is used. When the separation is assisted by the outputs of the speaker diarization, it is informed speech separation. The research presents novel: overlapped-speech detection algorithm, and two speech separation algorithms. The proposed overlapped-speech detection is an algorithm to estimate the switching instants of the input. Optimization loop is adapted to adopt the best capsulated audio features and to avoid the worst. The optimization depends on principles of the pattern recognition, and k-means clustering. For of 300 simulated conversations, averages of: False-Alarm Error is 1.9%, Missed-Speech Error is 0.4%, and Overlap-Speaker Error is 1%. Approximately, these errors equal the errors of best recent reliable speaker diarization corpuses. The proposed blind speech separation algorithm consists of four sequential techniques: filter-bank analysis, Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF), speaker clustering and filter-bank synthesis. Instead of the required speaker segmentation, effective standard framing is contributed. Average obtained objective tests (SAR, SDR and SIR) of 51 simulated conversations are: 5.06dB, 4.87dB and 12.47dB respectively. For the proposed informed speech separation algorithm, outputs of the speaker diarization are a generated-database. The database associated the speech separation by creating virtual targeted-speech and mixture. The contributed virtual signals are trained to facilitate the separation by homogenising them with the NMF-matrix elements of the real mixture. Contributed masking optimized the resulting speech. Average obtained SAR, SDR and SIR of 341 simulated conversations are 9.55dB, 1.12dB, and 2.97dB respectively. Per the objective tests of the two speech separation algorithms, they are in the mid-range of the well-known NMF-based audio and speech separation methods
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