Changsong Yu

2papers

2 Papers

SDMar 2, 2019
Weakly Labelled AudioSet Tagging with Attention Neural Networks

Qiuqiang Kong, Changsong Yu, Turab Iqbal et al.

Audio tagging is the task of predicting the presence or absence of sound classes within an audio clip. Previous work in audio tagging focused on relatively small datasets limited to recognising a small number of sound classes. We investigate audio tagging on AudioSet, which is a dataset consisting of over 2 million audio clips and 527 classes. AudioSet is weakly labelled, in that only the presence or absence of sound classes is known for each clip, while the onset and offset times are unknown. To address the weakly-labelled audio tagging problem, we propose attention neural networks as a way to attend the most salient parts of an audio clip. We bridge the connection between attention neural networks and multiple instance learning (MIL) methods, and propose decision-level and feature-level attention neural networks for audio tagging. We investigate attention neural networks modeled by different functions, depths and widths. Experiments on AudioSet show that the feature-level attention neural network achieves a state-of-the-art mean average precision (mAP) of 0.369, outperforming the best multiple instance learning (MIL) method of 0.317 and Google's deep neural network baseline of 0.314. In addition, we discover that the audio tagging performance on AudioSet embedding features has a weak correlation with the number of training samples and the quality of labels of each sound class.

ASMar 6, 2018
Multi-level Attention Model for Weakly Supervised Audio Classification

Changsong Yu, Karim Said Barsim, Qiuqiang Kong et al.

In this paper, we propose a multi-level attention model to solve the weakly labelled audio classification problem. The objective of audio classification is to predict the presence or absence of audio events in an audio clip. Recently, Google published a large scale weakly labelled dataset called Audio Set, where each audio clip contains only the presence or absence of the audio events, without the onset and offset time of the audio events. Our multi-level attention model is an extension to the previously proposed single-level attention model. It consists of several attention modules applied on intermediate neural network layers. The output of these attention modules are concatenated to a vector followed by a multi-label classifier to make the final prediction of each class. Experiments shown that our model achieves a mean average precision (mAP) of 0.360, outperforms the state-of-the-art single-level attention model of 0.327 and Google baseline of 0.314.