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Graph embedding for speaker recognition
Summary
Summary
This chapter presents applications of graph embedding to the problem of text-independent speaker recognition. Speaker recognition is a general term encompassing multiple applications. At the core is the problem of speaker comparison-given two speech recordings (utterances), produce a score which measures speaker similarity. Using speaker comparison, other applications can be...
Query-by-example using speaker content graphs
Summary
Summary
We describe methods for constructing and using content graphs for query-by-example speaker recognition tasks within a large speech corpus. This goal is achieved as follows: First, we describe an algorithm for constructing speaker content graphs, where nodes represent speech signals and edges represent speaker similarity. Speech signal similarity can be...
Supervector LDA - a new approach to reduced-complexity i-vector language recognition
Summary
Summary
In this paper, we extend our previous analysis of Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) subspace compensation techniques using Gaussian modeling in the supervector space combined with additive channel and observation noise. We show that under the modeling assumptions of a total-variability i-vector system, full Gaussian supervector scoring can also be performed...
Exploring the impact of advanced front-end processing on NIST speaker recognition microphone tasks
Summary
Summary
The NIST speaker recognition evaluation (SRE) featured microphone data in the 2005-2010 evaluations. The preprocessing and use of this data has typically been performed with telephone bandwidth and quantization. Although this approach is viable, it ignores the richer properties of the microphone data-multiple channels, high-rate sampling, linear encoding, ambient noise...
Linear prediction modulation filtering for speaker recognition of reverberant speech
Summary
Summary
This paper proposes a framework for spectral enhancement of reverberant speech based on inversion of the modulation transfer function. All-pole modeling of modulation spectra of clean and degraded speech are utilized to derive the linear prediction inverse modulation transfer function (LP-IMTF) solution as a low-order IIR filter in the modulation...
A new perspective on GMM subspace compensation based on PPCA and Wiener filtering
Summary
Summary
We present a new perspective on the subspace compensation techniques that currently dominate the field of speaker recognition using Gaussian Mixture Models (GMMs). Rather than the traditional factor analysis approach, we use Gaussian modeling in the sufficient statistic supervector space combined with Probabilistic Principal Component Analysis (PPCA) within-class and shared...
Phonologically-based biomarkers for major depressive disorder
Summary
Summary
Of increasing importance in the civilian and military population is the recognition of major depressive disorder at its earliest stages and intervention before the onset of severe symptoms. Toward the goal of more effective monitoring of depression severity, we introduce vocal biomarkers that are derived automatically from phonologically-based measures of...
Graph relational features for speaker recognition and mining
Summary
Summary
Recent advances in the field of speaker recognition have resulted in highly efficient speaker comparison algorithms. The advent of these algorithms allows for leveraging a background set, consisting a large numbers of unlabeled recordings, to improve recognition. In this work, a relational graph, where nodes represent utterances and links represent...
Assessing the speaker recognition performance of naive listeners using Mechanical Turk
Summary
Summary
In this paper we attempt to quantify the ability of naive listeners to perform speaker recognition in the context of the NIST evaluation task. We describe our protocol: a series of listening experiments using large numbers of naive listeners (432) on Amazon's Mechanical Turk that attempts to measure the ability...
The MIT LL 2010 speaker recognition evaluation system: scalable language-independent speaker recognition
Summary
Summary
Research in the speaker recognition community has continued to address methods of mitigating variational nuisances. Telephone and auxiliary-microphone recorded speech emphasize the need for a robust way of dealing with unwanted variation. The design of recent 2010 NIST-SRE Speaker Recognition Evaluation (SRE) reflects this research emphasis. In this paper, we...