5,228 research outputs found
Grasping asymmetric information in market impacts
The price impact for a single trade is estimated by the immediate response on
an event time scale, i.e., the immediate change of midpoint prices before and
after a trade. We work out the price impacts across a correlated financial
market. We quantify the asymmetries of the distributions and of the market
structures of cross-impacts, and find that the impacts across the market are
asymmetric and non-random. Using spectral statistics and Shannon entropy, we
visualize the asymmetric information in price impacts. Also, we introduce an
entropy of impacts to estimate the randomness between stocks. We show that the
useful information is encoded in the impacts corresponding to small entropy.
The stocks with large number of trades are more likely to impact others, while
the less traded stocks have higher probability to be impacted by others
Online Speaker Separation Using Deep Clustering
In this thesis, a low-latency variant of speaker-independent deep clustering method is
proposed for speaker separation. Compared to the offline deep clustering separation
system, bidirectional long-short term memory networks (BLSTMs) are replaced with
long-short term memory networks (LSTMs). The reason is that the data has to be
fed to the BLSTM networks both forward and backward directions. Additionally, the
final outputs depend on both directions, which make online processing not possible.
Also, 32 ms synthesis window is replaced with 8 ms in order to cooperate with low-
latency applications like hearing aids since the algorithmic latency depends upon the
length of synthesis window. Furthermore, the beginning of the audio mixture, here,
referred as buffer, is used to get the cluster centers for the constituent speakers in the
mixture serving as the initialization purpose. Later, those centers are used to assign
clusters for the rest of the mixture to achieve speaker separation with the latency
of 8 ms. The algorithm is evaluated on the Wall Street Journal corpus (WSJ0).
Changing the networks from BLSTM to LSTM while keeping the same window
length degrades the separation performance measured by signal-to-distortion ratio
(SDR) by 1.0 dB, which implies that the future information is important for the
separation. For investigating the effect of window length, keeping the same network
structure (LSTM), by changing window length from 32 ms to 8 ms, another 1.1 dB
drop in SDR is found. For the low-latency deep clustering speaker separation system,
different duration of buffer is studied. It is observed that initially, the separation
performance increases as the buffer increases. However, with buffer length of 0.3 s,
the separation performance keeps steady even by increasing the buffer. Compared to
offline deep clustering separation system, degradation of 2.8 dB in SDR is observed
for online system
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