18 research outputs found
Speaker anonymization using neural audio codec language models
The vast majority of approaches to speaker anonymization involve the
extraction of fundamental frequency estimates, linguistic features and a
speaker embedding which is perturbed to obfuscate the speaker identity before
an anonymized speech waveform is resynthesized using a vocoder. Recent work has
shown that x-vector transformations are difficult to control consistently:
other sources of speaker information contained within fundamental frequency and
linguistic features are re-entangled upon vocoding, meaning that anonymized
speech signals still contain speaker information. We propose an approach based
upon neural audio codecs (NACs), which are known to generate high-quality
synthetic speech when combined with language models. NACs use quantized codes,
which are known to effectively bottleneck speaker-related information: we
demonstrate the potential of speaker anonymization systems based on NAC
language modeling by applying the evaluation framework of the Voice Privacy
Challenge 2022.Comment: Submitted to ICASSP 202
Malafide: a novel adversarial convolutive noise attack against deepfake and spoofing detection systems
We present Malafide, a universal adversarial attack against automatic speaker
verification (ASV) spoofing countermeasures (CMs). By introducing convolutional
noise using an optimised linear time-invariant filter, Malafide attacks can be
used to compromise CM reliability while preserving other speech attributes such
as quality and the speaker's voice. In contrast to other adversarial attacks
proposed recently, Malafide filters are optimised independently of the input
utterance and duration, are tuned instead to the underlying spoofing attack,
and require the optimisation of only a small number of filter coefficients.
Even so, they degrade CM performance estimates by an order of magnitude, even
in black-box settings, and can also be configured to overcome integrated CM and
ASV subsystems. Integrated solutions that use self-supervised learning CMs,
however, are more robust, under both black-box and white-box settings.Comment: Accepted at INTERSPEECH 202
Eating Disorders and Disturbed Eating Behaviors Underlying Body Weight Differences in Patients Affected by Endometriosis: Preliminary Results from an Italian Cross-Sectional Study
Abstract: This study aimed to characterize the prevalence of eating disorders(EDs), disturbed eating behaviors (DEBs), and emotional eating attitudes (EEAs) among patients affected by endometriosis in order to understand a potential crosslink between this impacting gynecological disease and a Body Mass Index shift. A total of 30 patients were recruited at an endometriosis outpatient clinic in Bologna and were assessed by using standardized instruments and specific questionnaires for EDs, DEBs, and EEAs. Sociodemographic information and endometriosis clinical features and history information were collected by adopting a specific questionnaire. Retrospective reports of lifetime Body Mass Index (BMI) changes, current BMI, peak pain severity during the last menstrual period, and the average of pain intensity during the last intermenstrual period were used for a correlation with the mean score from eating-behavior scales’ assessment. The preliminary results indicate that, although only 3.33% of endometriosis patients are affected by ED, statistically significant differences at the mean scores of DEBs and EEAs assessment scales were found by strati-fying patients on the basis of BMI levels at risk for infertility and coronary heart disease and on the basis ofmoderate/severe pain levels. The enrichment of the sample size and the recruitment of the control group to complete the study enrollment will allow us to investigate more complex and strong correlation findings and to assess the prevalence of EDs among endometriosis patients.
Keywords: endometriosis; BMI; pain; eating disorders;disturbed eating behaviors; emotional
eating attitude
Antidepressant Therapeutic Drug Monitoring by Minimally Invasive Techniques in Eating Disorders Patients: Preliminary Results from a Pilot Study with Focus on Vortioxetine
Patients with Eating Disorders (ED) including, among others, Anorexia Nervosa (AN), Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and Binge-Eating..