Feyisayo Olalere

SD
h-index40
3papers
1citation
Novelty42%
AI Score38

3 Papers

44.5SDJun 2
Feasibility of Time-Domain DNN-Based Speech Enhancement on Embedded FPGA for Hearing Aid

Feyisayo Olalere, Umut Altin, Kiki van der Heijden et al.

Hearing aids impose strict latency and power constraints that current DNN-based speech enhancement systems struggle to meet on embedded hardware. We characterize this gap by deploying both speech separation and denoising using the lightweight SuDoRM-RF++ architecture on the AMD-Xilinx Kria KV260, evaluated at FP32 and 16-bit fixed-point precision for each task. Across these configurations, first-sample latency tracks with on-chip parameter caching rather than arithmetic throughput, identifying data movement as the primary bottleneck. Precision reduction halves the model memory footprint without compromising objective speech quality. The fixed-point denoising accelerator achieves a first-sample latency of 9.7~ms, meeting the 10~ms clinical threshold, while speech separation reaches 16.0~ms. These measurements establish concrete resource requirements for embedded DNN-based speech enhancement and quantify the remaining gap to hearing aid deployment.

SDNov 10, 2025
Speech Separation for Hearing-Impaired Children in the Classroom

Feyisayo Olalere, Kiki van der Heijden, H. Christiaan Stronks et al.

Classroom environments are particularly challenging for children with hearing impairments, where background noise, multiple talkers, and reverberation degrade speech perception. These difficulties are greater for children than adults, yet most deep learning speech separation models for assistive devices are developed using adult voices in simplified, low-reverberation conditions. This overlooks both the higher spectral similarity of children's voices, which weakens separation cues, and the acoustic complexity of real classrooms. We address this gap using MIMO-TasNet, a compact, low-latency, multi-channel architecture suited for real-time deployment in bilateral hearing aids or cochlear implants. We simulated naturalistic classroom scenes with moving child-child and child-adult talker pairs under varying noise and distance conditions. Training strategies tested how well the model adapts to children's speech through spatial cues. Models trained on adult speech, classroom data, and finetuned variants were compared to assess data-efficient adaptation. Results show that adult-trained models perform well in clean scenes, but classroom-specific training greatly improves separation quality. Finetuning with only half the classroom data achieved comparable gains, confirming efficient transfer learning. Training with diffuse babble noise further enhanced robustness, and the model preserved spatial awareness while generalizing to unseen distances. These findings demonstrate that spatially aware architectures combined with targeted adaptation can improve speech accessibility for children in noisy classrooms, supporting future on-device assistive technologies.

SDJan 24, 2025
Leveraging Spatial Cues from Cochlear Implant Microphones to Efficiently Enhance Speech Separation in Real-World Listening Scenes

Feyisayo Olalere, Kiki van der Heijden, Christiaan H. Stronks et al.

Speech separation approaches for single-channel, dry speech mixtures have significantly improved. However, real-world spatial and reverberant acoustic environments remain challenging, limiting the effectiveness of these approaches for assistive hearing devices like cochlear implants (CIs). To address this, we quantify the impact of real-world acoustic scenes on speech separation and explore how spatial cues can enhance separation quality efficiently. We analyze performance based on implicit spatial cues (inherent in the acoustic input and learned by the model) and explicit spatial cues (manually calculated spatial features added as auxiliary inputs). Our findings show that spatial cues (both implicit and explicit) improve separation for mixtures with spatially separated and nearby talkers. Furthermore, spatial cues enhance separation when spectral cues are ambiguous, such as when voices are similar. Explicit spatial cues are particularly beneficial when implicit spatial cues are weak. For instance, single CI microphone recordings provide weaker implicit spatial cues than bilateral CIs, but even single CIs benefit from explicit cues. These results emphasize the importance of training models on real-world data to improve generalizability in everyday listening scenarios. Additionally, our statistical analyses offer insights into how data properties influence model performance, supporting the development of efficient speech separation approaches for CIs and other assistive devices in real-world settings.