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Speaker recognition

About: Speaker recognition is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 14990 publications have been published within this topic receiving 310061 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is highlighted that a key element in recent improvements is still the classical maximum a posteriori (MAP) adaptation, while the latest compensation methods have a crucial impact on overall performances.
Abstract: This paper illustrates an evolution in state-of-the-art speaker verification by highlighting the contribution from newly developed techniques. Starting from a baseline system based on Gaussian mixture models that reached state-of-the-art performances during the NIST'04 SRE, final systems with new intersession compensation techniques show a relative gain of around 50%. This work highlights that a key element in recent improvements is still the classical maximum a posteriori (MAP) adaptation, while the latest compensation methods have a crucial impact on overall performances. Nuisance attribute projection (NAP) and factor analysis (FA) are examined and shown to provide significant improvements. For FA, a new symmetrical scoring (SFA) approach is proposed. We also show further improvement with an original combination between a support vector machine and SFA. This work is undertaken through the open-source ALIZE toolkit.

90 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
14 Mar 2010
TL;DR: The viability of using the posteriorgram approach to handle many talkers by finding clusters of words in the TIMIT corpus is demonstrated.
Abstract: In this paper, we explore the use of a Gaussian posteriorgram based representation for unsupervised discovery of speech patterns. Compared with our previous work, the new approach provides significant improvement towards speaker independence. The framework consists of three main procedures: a Gaussian posteriorgram generation procedure which learns an unsupervised Gaussian mixture model and labels each speech frame with a Gaussian posteriorgram representation; a segmental dynamic time warping procedure which locates pairs of similar sequences of Gaussian posteriorgram vectors; and a graph clustering procedure which groups similar sequences into clusters. We demonstrate the viability of using the posteriorgram approach to handle many talkers by finding clusters of words in the TIMIT corpus.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A Deterministic plus Stochastic Model (DSM) of the residual signal turns out to significantly outperform the traditional pulse excitation and provides a quality equivalent to STRAIGHT.
Abstract: The modeling of speech production often relies on a source-filter approach. Although methods parameterizing the filter have nowadays reached a certain maturity, there is still a lot to be gained for several speech processing applications in finding an appropriate excitation model. This manuscript presents a Deterministic plus Stochastic Model (DSM) of the residual signal. The DSM consists of two contributions acting in two distinct spectral bands delimited by a maximum voiced frequency. Both components are extracted from an analysis performed on a speaker-dependent dataset of pitch-synchronous residual frames. The deterministic part models the low-frequency contents and arises from an orthonormal decomposition of these frames. As for the stochastic component, it is a high-frequency noise modulated both in time and frequency. Some interesting phonetic and computational properties of the DSM are also highlighted. The applicability of the DSM in two fields of speech processing is then studied. First, it is shown that incorporating the DSM vocoder in HMM-based speech synthesis enhances the delivered quality. The proposed approach turns out to significantly outperform the traditional pulse excitation and provides a quality equivalent to STRAIGHT. In a second application, the potential of glottal signatures derived from the proposed DSM is investigated for speaker identification purpose. Interestingly, these signatures are shown to lead to better recognition rates than other glottal-based methods.

90 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
25 Aug 2013
TL;DR: This work studies the vulnerability of two well-known speaker recognition systems, traditional Gaussian mixture model – universal background model (GMM-UBM) and a state-of-the-art i-vector classifier with cosine scoring, which consists of one professional Finnish imitator impersonating five wellknown Finnish public figures.
Abstract: Voice imitation is mimicry of another speaker’s voice characteristics and speech behavior. Professional voice mimicry can create entertaining, yet realistic sounding target speaker renditions. As mimicry tends to exaggerate prosodic, idiosyncratic and lexical behavior, it is unclear how modern spectral-feature automatic speaker verification systems respond to mimicry “attacks”. We study the vulnerability of two well-known speaker recognition systems, traditional Gaussian mixture model – universal background model (GMM-UBM) and a state-of-the-art i-vector classifier with cosine scoring. The material consists of one professional Finnish imitator impersonating five wellknown Finnish public figures. In a carefully controlled setting, mimicry attack does slightly increase the false acceptance rate for the i-vector system, but generally this is not alarmingly large in comparison to voice conversion or playback attacks. Index Terms: Voice imitation, speaker recognition, mimicry attack

90 citations

Patent
09 Jul 2003
TL;DR: In this article, a speech data mining system for use in generating a rich transcription having utility in call center management includes a speech differentiation module differentiating between speech of interacting speakers, and a speech recognition module improving automatic recognition of speech of one speaker based on interaction with another speaker employed as a reference speaker.
Abstract: A speech data mining system for use in generating a rich transcription having utility in call center management includes a speech differentiation module differentiating between speech of interacting speakers, and a speech recognition module improving automatic recognition of speech of one speaker based on interaction with another speaker employed as a reference speaker. A transcript generation module generates a rich transcript based on recognized speech of the speakers. Focused, interactive language models improve recognition of a customer on a low quality channel using context extracted from speech of a call center operator on a high quality channel with a speech model adapted to the operator. Mined speech data includes number of interaction turns, customer frustration phrases, operator polity, interruptions, and/or contexts extracted from speech recognition results, such as topics, complaints, solutions, and resolutions. Mined speech data is useful in call center and/or product or service quality management.

89 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023165
2022468
2021283
2020475
2019484
2018420