Ricardo Falcon-Perez

h-index18
2papers

2 Papers

ASNov 26, 2025
The Spheres Dataset: Multitrack Orchestral Recordings for Music Source Separation and Information Retrieval

Jaime Garcia-Martinez, David Diaz-Guerra, John Anderson et al.

This paper introduces The Spheres dataset, multitrack orchestral recordings designed to advance machine learning research in music source separation and related MIR tasks within the classical music domain. The dataset is composed of over one hour recordings of musical pieces performed by the Colibrì Ensemble at The Spheres recording studio, capturing two canonical works - Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet and Mozart's Symphony No. 40 - along with chromatic scales and solo excerpts for each instrument. The recording setup employed 23 microphones, including close spot, main, and ambient microphones, enabling the creation of realistic stereo mixes with controlled bleeding and providing isolated stems for supervised training of source separation models. In addition, room impulse responses were estimated for each instrument position, offering valuable acoustic characterization of the recording space. We present the dataset structure, acoustic analysis, and baseline evaluations using X-UMX based models for orchestral family separation and microphone debleeding. Results highlight both the potential and the challenges of source separation in complex orchestral scenarios, underscoring the dataset's value for benchmarking and for exploring new approaches to separation, localization, dereverberation, and immersive rendering of classical music.

ASOct 12, 2021
Spatial mixup: Directional loudness modification as data augmentation for sound event localization and detection

Ricardo Falcon-Perez, Kazuki Shimada, Yuichiro Koyama et al.

Data augmentation methods have shown great importance in diverse supervised learning problems where labeled data is scarce or costly to obtain. For sound event localization and detection (SELD) tasks several augmentation methods have been proposed, with most borrowing ideas from other domains such as images, speech, or monophonic audio. However, only a few exploit the spatial properties of a full 3D audio scene. We propose Spatial Mixup, as an application of parametric spatial audio effects for data augmentation, which modifies the directional properties of a multi-channel spatial audio signal encoded in the ambisonics domain. Similarly to beamforming, these modifications enhance or suppress signals arriving from certain directions, although the effect is less pronounced. Therefore enabling deep learning models to achieve invariance to small spatial perturbations. The method is evaluated with experiments in the DCASE 2021 Task 3 dataset, where spatial mixup increases performance over a non-augmented baseline, and compares to other well known augmentation methods. Furthermore, combining spatial mixup with other methods greatly improves performance.