Jose A. Gonzalez

2papers

2 Papers

ASApr 5, 2019
Robust Binaural Localization of a Target Sound Source by Combining Spectral Source Models and Deep Neural Networks

Ning Ma, Jose A. Gonzalez, Guy J. Brown

Despite there being clear evidence for top-down (e.g., attentional) effects in biological spatial hearing, relatively few machine hearing systems exploit top-down model-based knowledge in sound localisation. This paper addresses this issue by proposing a novel framework for binaural sound localisation that combines model-based information about the spectral characteristics of sound sources and deep neural networks (DNNs). A target source model and a background source model are first estimated during a training phase using spectral features extracted from sound signals in isolation. When the identity of the background source is not available, a universal background model can be used. During testing, the source models are used jointly to explain the mixed observations and improve the localisation process by selectively weighting source azimuth posteriors output by a DNN-based localisation system. To address the possible mismatch between training and testing, a model adaptation process is further employed on-the-fly during testing, which adapts the background model parameters directly from the noisy observations in an iterative manner. The proposed system therefore combines model-based and data-driven information flow within a single computational framework. The evaluation task involved localisation of a target speech source in the presence of an interfering source and room reverberation. Our experiments show that by exploiting model-based information in this way, sound localisation performance can be improved substantially under various noisy and reverberant conditions.

SDAug 31, 2018
Whispered-to-voiced Alaryngeal Speech Conversion with Generative Adversarial Networks

Santiago Pascual, Antonio Bonafonte, Joan Serrà et al.

Most methods of voice restoration for patients suffering from aphonia either produce whispered or monotone speech. Apart from intelligibility, this type of speech lacks expressiveness and naturalness due to the absence of pitch (whispered speech) or artificial generation of it (monotone speech). Existing techniques to restore prosodic information typically combine a vocoder, which parameterises the speech signal, with machine learning techniques that predict prosodic information. In contrast, this paper describes an end-to-end neural approach for estimating a fully-voiced speech waveform from whispered alaryngeal speech. By adapting our previous work in speech enhancement with generative adversarial networks, we develop a speaker-dependent model to perform whispered-to-voiced speech conversion. Preliminary qualitative results show effectiveness in re-generating voiced speech, with the creation of realistic pitch contours.