36 research outputs found

    A single channel speech enhancement technique exploiting human auditory masking properties

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    To enhance extreme corrupted speech signals, an Improved Psychoacoustically Motivated Spectral Weighting Rule (IPMSWR) is proposed, that controls the predefined residual noise level by a time-frequency dependent parameter. Unlike conventional Psychoacoustically Motivated Spectral Weighting Rules (PMSWR), the level of the residual noise is here varied throughout the enhanced speech based on the discrimination between the regions with speech presence and speech absence by means of segmental SNR within critical bands. Controlling in such a way the level of the residual noise in the noise only region avoids the unpleasant residual noise perceived at very low SNRs. To derive the gain coefficients, the computation of the masking curve and the estimation of the corrupting noise power are required. Since the clean speech is generally not available for a single channel speech enhancement technique, the rough clean speech components needed to compute the masking curve are here obtained using advanced spectral subtraction techniques. To estimate the corrupting noise, a new technique is employed, that relies on the noise power estimation using rapid adaptation and recursive smoothing principles. The performances of the proposed approach are objectively and subjectively compared to the conventional approaches to highlight the aforementioned improvement

    An On-Line Dictionary for Radiology, Toxicology and Emergency Management

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    Fluency in foreign languages is becoming more and more important for university students and professionals. Especially since the European Union has expanded to the East, possibilities of collaboration between the new and old members have multiplied. Bachelor and Master programs usually contain courses providing basic knowledge of English and other languages, but these cannot go into details. We therefore decided to develop an on-line dictionary for the technical terminology used by students and professionals in the fields of Radiology, Toxicology and Emergency Management. The dictionary allows users to type in any specific term relevant to these subjects in one language, and get the equivalent in one of four other languages. Input or output is possible in Czech, English, German, Russian, and Slovak. The dictionary is accessible on the website of our department, but we are also able to provide a CD version. With the help of existing dictionaries and relevant textbooks, a word list has been created, which for a start contains about 3,000 terms. The dictionary, of course, needs completion and correction, so our website asks users to contribute further terms, and suggest changes in the translations offered. While the project is in progress, we would also like to see whether colleagues from other countries are interested to join and add other languages

    Ethical aspects in the use of radiation in medicine: update from ICRP Task Group 109.

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    Whereas scientific evidence is the basis for recommendations and guidance on radiological protection, professional ethics is critically important and should always guide professional behaviour. The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) established Task Group 109 to advise medical professionals, patients, families, carers, the public, and authorities about the ethical aspects of radiological protection of patients in the diagnostic and therapeutic use of radiation in medicine. Occupational exposures and research-related exposures are not within the scope of this task group. Task Group 109 will produce a report that will be available to the different interested parties for consultation before publication. Presently, the report is at the stage of a working document that has benefitted from an international workshop organised on the topic by the World Health Organization. It presents the history of ethics in medicine in ICRP, and explains why this subject is important, and the benefits it can bring to the standard biomedical ethics. As risk is an essential part in decision-making and communication, a summary is included on what is known about the dose-effect relationship, with emphasis on the associated uncertainties. Once this theoretical framework has been presented, the report becomes resolutely more practical. First, it proposes an evaluation method to analyse specific situations from an ethical point of view. This method allows stakeholders to review a set of six ethical values and provides hints on how they could be balanced. Next, various situations (e.g. pregnancy, elderly, paediatric, end of life) are considered in two steps: first within a realistic, ethically challenging scenario on which the evaluation method is applied; and second within a more general context. Scenarios are presented and discussed with attention to specific patient circumstances, and on how and which reflections on ethical values can be of help in the decision-making process. Finally, two important related aspects are considered: how should we communicate with patients, family, and other stakeholders; and how should we incorporate ethics into the education and training of medical professionals
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