Andreas I. Koutrouvelis

SD
3papers
79citations
Novelty53%
AI Score24

3 Papers

ASOct 12, 2018
Robust Joint Estimation of Multi-Microphone Signal Model Parameters

Andreas I. Koutrouvelis, Richard C. Hendriks, Richard Heusdens et al.

One of the biggest challenges in multi-microphone applications is the estimation of the parameters of the signal model such as the power spectral densities (PSDs) of the sources, the early (relative) acoustic transfer functions of the sources with respect to the microphones, the PSD of late reverberation, and the PSDs of microphone-self noise. Typically, the existing methods estimate subsets of the aforementioned parameters and assume some of the other parameters to be known a priori. This may result in inconsistencies and inaccurately estimated parameters and potential performance degradation in the applications using these estimated parameters. So far, there is no method to jointly estimate all the aforementioned parameters. In this paper, we propose a robust method for jointly estimating all the aforementioned parameters using confirmatory factor analysis. The estimation accuracy of the signal-model parameters thus obtained outperforms existing methods in most cases. We experimentally show significant performance gains in several multi-microphone applications over state-of-the-art methods.

SDMay 4, 2018
A Convex Approximation of the Relaxed Binaural Beamforming Optimization Problem

Andreas I. Koutrouvelis, Richard C. Hendriks, Richard Heusdens et al.

The recently proposed relaxed binaural beamforming (RBB) optimization problem provides a flexible trade-off between noise suppression and binaural-cue preservation of the sound sources in the acoustic scene. It minimizes the output noise power, under the constraints which guarantee that the target remains unchanged after processing and the binaural-cue distortions of the acoustic sources will be less than a user-defined threshold. However, the RBB problem is a computationally demanding non-convex optimization problem. The only existing suboptimal method which approximately solves the RBB is a successive convex optimization (SCO) method which, typically, requires to solve multiple convex optimization problems per frequency bin, in order to converge. Convergence is achieved when all constraints of the RBB optimization problem are satisfied. In this paper, we propose a semi-definite convex relaxation (SDCR) of the RBB optimization problem. The proposed suboptimal SDCR method solves a single convex optimization problem per frequency bin, resulting in a much lower computational complexity than the SCO method. Unlike the SCO method, the SDCR method does not guarantee user-controlled upper-bounded binaural-cue distortions. To tackle this problem we also propose a suboptimal hybrid method which combines the SDCR and SCO methods. Instrumental measures combined with a listening test show that the SDCR and hybrid methods achieve significantly lower computational complexity than the SCO method, and in most cases better trade-off between predicted intelligibility and binaural-cue preservation than the SCO method.

SDSep 11, 2016
Relaxed Binaural LCMV Beamforming

Andreas I. Koutrouvelis, Richard C. Hendriks, Richard Heusdens et al.

In this paper we propose a new binaural beamforming technique which can be seen as a relaxation of the linearly constrained minimum variance (LCMV) framework. The proposed method can achieve simultaneous noise reduction and exact binaural cue preservation of the target source, similar to the binaural minimum variance distortionless response (BMVDR) method. However, unlike BMVDR, the proposed method is also able to preserve the binaural cues of multiple interferers to a certain predefined accuracy. Specifically, it is able to control the trade-off between noise reduction and binaural cue preservation of the interferers by using a separate trade-off parameter per interferer. Moreover, we provide a robust way of selecting these trade-off parameters in such a way that the preservation accuracy for the binaural cues of the interferers is always better than the corresponding ones of the BMVDR. The relaxation of the constraints in the proposed method achieves approximate binaural cue preservation of more interferers than other previously presented LCMV-based binaural beamforming methods that use strict equality constraints.