Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2410.11243

Topic
Computer Science - Sound Computer Science - Computation and... Electrical Engineering and Systems...
Author
Ashihara, Takanori Moriya, Takafumi Horiguchi, Shota Peng, Junyi Ochiai, Tsubasa Delcroix, Marc Matsuura, Kohei Sato, Hiroshi
Category

Computer Science

Year

2024

listing date

10/23/2024

Keywords
speaker science processing target-speaker speech
Metrics

Abstract

Target-speaker speech processing (TS) tasks, such as target-speaker automatic speech recognition (TS-ASR), target speech extraction (TSE), and personal voice activity detection (p-VAD), are important for extracting information about a desired speaker's speech even when it is corrupted by interfering speakers.

While most studies have focused on training schemes or system architectures for each specific task, the auxiliary network for embedding target-speaker cues has not been investigated comprehensively in a unified cross-task evaluation.

Therefore, this paper aims to address a fundamental question: what is the preferred speaker embedding for TS tasks?

To this end, for the TS-ASR, TSE, and p-VAD tasks, we compare pre-trained speaker encoders (i.e., self-supervised or speaker recognition models) that compute speaker embeddings from pre-recorded enrollment speech of the target speaker with ideal speaker embeddings derived directly from the target speaker's identity in the form of a one-hot vector.

To further understand the properties of ideal speaker embedding, we optimize it using a gradient-based approach to improve performance on the TS task.

Our analysis reveals that speaker verification performance is somewhat unrelated to TS task performances, the one-hot vector outperforms enrollment-based ones, and the optimal embedding depends on the input mixture.

;Comment: Accepted at IEEE SLT 2024

Ashihara, Takanori,Moriya, Takafumi,Horiguchi, Shota,Peng, Junyi,Ochiai, Tsubasa,Delcroix, Marc,Matsuura, Kohei,Sato, Hiroshi, 2024, Investigation of Speaker Representation for Target-Speaker Speech Processing

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Skin cancer prevention behaviors, beliefs, distress, and worry among hispanics in Florida and Puerto Rico
skin cancer hispanic/latino prevention behaviors protection motivation theory florida puerto rico variables rico psychosocial behavior response efficacy levels skin cancer participants prevention behaviors spanish-preferring tampeños puerto hispanics