Abstract
Double-talk recognition under a distant microphone condition, a serious problem in speech applications in a real environment, is realized through use of modified SAFIA acoustic model adaptation or training. The original SAFIA is a high-performance audio segregation method based on band selection using two directivity microphones. We have modified SAFIA by adopting array signal processing have realized optimal directivity for SAFIA.We also used generalized harmonic analysis (GHA) instead of FFT for the spectral analysis in SAFIA to remove the effect of windowing which causes sound-quality degradation in SAFIA. These modifications of SAFIA enable good segregation in a human auditory sense, but the quality is still insufficient for recognition. Because SAFIA causes some particular distortion, we used MLLR-based acoustic model adaptation immunity training to be robust to the distortion of SAFIA. These efforts enabled 76.2% word accuracy under the condition that the SN ratio is 0 dB, this represents a 45% reduction in the error obtained in the case where only array signal processing was used, and a 30% error reduction compared with when only SAFIAbased audio segregation was used.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | EUROSPEECH 2003 - 8th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology |
Publisher | International Speech Communication Association |
Pages | 1285-1288 |
Number of pages | 4 |
Publication status | Published - 2003 |
Event | 8th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology, EUROSPEECH 2003 - Geneva, Switzerland Duration: 2003 Sept 1 → 2003 Sept 4 |
Other
Other | 8th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology, EUROSPEECH 2003 |
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Country/Territory | Switzerland |
City | Geneva |
Period | 03/9/1 → 03/9/4 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Computer Science Applications
- Software
- Linguistics and Language
- Communication