Ivan Shchekotov

SD
4papers
44citations
Novelty39%
AI Score24

4 Papers

SDApr 6, 2022
FFC-SE: Fast Fourier Convolution for Speech Enhancement

Ivan Shchekotov, Pavel Andreev, Oleg Ivanov et al.

Fast Fourier convolution (FFC) is the recently proposed neural operator showing promising performance in several computer vision problems. The FFC operator allows employing large receptive field operations within early layers of the neural network. It was shown to be especially helpful for inpainting of periodic structures which are common in audio processing. In this work, we design neural network architectures which adapt FFC for speech enhancement. We hypothesize that a large receptive field allows these networks to produce more coherent phases than vanilla convolutional models, and validate this hypothesis experimentally. We found that neural networks based on Fast Fourier convolution outperform analogous convolutional models and show better or comparable results with other speech enhancement baselines.

SDJun 1, 2023
UnDiff: Unsupervised Voice Restoration with Unconditional Diffusion Model

Anastasiia Iashchenko, Pavel Andreev, Ivan Shchekotov et al.

This paper introduces UnDiff, a diffusion probabilistic model capable of solving various speech inverse tasks. Being once trained for speech waveform generation in an unconditional manner, it can be adapted to different tasks including degradation inversion, neural vocoding, and source separation. In this paper, we, first, tackle the challenging problem of unconditional waveform generation by comparing different neural architectures and preconditioning domains. After that, we demonstrate how the trained unconditional diffusion could be adapted to different tasks of speech processing by the means of recent developments in post-training conditioning of diffusion models. Finally, we demonstrate the performance of the proposed technique on the tasks of bandwidth extension, declipping, vocoding, and speech source separation and compare it to the baselines. The codes are publicly available.

SDNov 3, 2022
Iterative autoregression: a novel trick to improve your low-latency speech enhancement model

Pavel Andreev, Nicholas Babaev, Azat Saginbaev et al.

Streaming models are an essential component of real-time speech enhancement tools. The streaming regime constrains speech enhancement models to use only a tiny context of future information. As a result, the low-latency streaming setup is generally considered a challenging task and has a significant negative impact on the model's quality. However, the sequential nature of streaming generation offers a natural possibility for autoregression, that is, utilizing previous predictions while making current ones. The conventional method for training autoregressive models is teacher forcing, but its primary drawback lies in the training-inference mismatch that can lead to a substantial degradation in quality. In this study, we propose a straightforward yet effective alternative technique for training autoregressive low-latency speech enhancement models. We demonstrate that the proposed approach leads to stable improvement across diverse architectures and training scenarios.

CVJun 20, 2024
Regularized Distribution Matching Distillation for One-step Unpaired Image-to-Image Translation

Denis Rakitin, Ivan Shchekotov, Dmitry Vetrov

Diffusion distillation methods aim to compress the diffusion models into efficient one-step generators while trying to preserve quality. Among them, Distribution Matching Distillation (DMD) offers a suitable framework for training general-form one-step generators, applicable beyond unconditional generation. In this work, we introduce its modification, called Regularized Distribution Matching Distillation, applicable to unpaired image-to-image (I2I) problems. We demonstrate its empirical performance in application to several translation tasks, including 2D examples and I2I between different image datasets, where it performs on par or better than multi-step diffusion baselines.