2,409 research outputs found
FaceFilter: Audio-visual speech separation using still images
The objective of this paper is to separate a target speaker's speech from a
mixture of two speakers using a deep audio-visual speech separation network.
Unlike previous works that used lip movement on video clips or pre-enrolled
speaker information as an auxiliary conditional feature, we use a single face
image of the target speaker. In this task, the conditional feature is obtained
from facial appearance in cross-modal biometric task, where audio and visual
identity representations are shared in latent space. Learnt identities from
facial images enforce the network to isolate matched speakers and extract the
voices from mixed speech. It solves the permutation problem caused by swapped
channel outputs, frequently occurred in speech separation tasks. The proposed
method is far more practical than video-based speech separation since user
profile images are readily available on many platforms. Also, unlike
speaker-aware separation methods, it is applicable on separation with unseen
speakers who have never been enrolled before. We show strong qualitative and
quantitative results on challenging real-world examples.Comment: Under submission as a conference paper. Video examples:
https://youtu.be/ku9xoLh62
Visual Speech Enhancement
When video is shot in noisy environment, the voice of a speaker seen in the
video can be enhanced using the visible mouth movements, reducing background
noise. While most existing methods use audio-only inputs, improved performance
is obtained with our visual speech enhancement, based on an audio-visual neural
network. We include in the training data videos to which we added the voice of
the target speaker as background noise. Since the audio input is not sufficient
to separate the voice of a speaker from his own voice, the trained model better
exploits the visual input and generalizes well to different noise types. The
proposed model outperforms prior audio visual methods on two public lipreading
datasets. It is also the first to be demonstrated on a dataset not designed for
lipreading, such as the weekly addresses of Barack Obama.Comment: Accepted to Interspeech 2018. Supplementary video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyYarDGpcY
An Overview of Deep-Learning-Based Audio-Visual Speech Enhancement and Separation
Speech enhancement and speech separation are two related tasks, whose purpose
is to extract either one or more target speech signals, respectively, from a
mixture of sounds generated by several sources. Traditionally, these tasks have
been tackled using signal processing and machine learning techniques applied to
the available acoustic signals. Since the visual aspect of speech is
essentially unaffected by the acoustic environment, visual information from the
target speakers, such as lip movements and facial expressions, has also been
used for speech enhancement and speech separation systems. In order to
efficiently fuse acoustic and visual information, researchers have exploited
the flexibility of data-driven approaches, specifically deep learning,
achieving strong performance. The ceaseless proposal of a large number of
techniques to extract features and fuse multimodal information has highlighted
the need for an overview that comprehensively describes and discusses
audio-visual speech enhancement and separation based on deep learning. In this
paper, we provide a systematic survey of this research topic, focusing on the
main elements that characterise the systems in the literature: acoustic
features; visual features; deep learning methods; fusion techniques; training
targets and objective functions. In addition, we review deep-learning-based
methods for speech reconstruction from silent videos and audio-visual sound
source separation for non-speech signals, since these methods can be more or
less directly applied to audio-visual speech enhancement and separation.
Finally, we survey commonly employed audio-visual speech datasets, given their
central role in the development of data-driven approaches, and evaluation
methods, because they are generally used to compare different systems and
determine their performance
Effects of Lombard Reflex on the Performance of Deep-Learning-Based Audio-Visual Speech Enhancement Systems
Humans tend to change their way of speaking when they are immersed in a noisy
environment, a reflex known as Lombard effect. Current speech enhancement
systems based on deep learning do not usually take into account this change in
the speaking style, because they are trained with neutral (non-Lombard) speech
utterances recorded under quiet conditions to which noise is artificially
added. In this paper, we investigate the effects that the Lombard reflex has on
the performance of audio-visual speech enhancement systems based on deep
learning. The results show that a gap in the performance of as much as
approximately 5 dB between the systems trained on neutral speech and the ones
trained on Lombard speech exists. This indicates the benefit of taking into
account the mismatch between neutral and Lombard speech in the design of
audio-visual speech enhancement systems
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