Shanzheng Guan

SD
3papers
3citations
Novelty52%
AI Score21

3 Papers

SDJul 1, 2021
Attention-based multi-channel speaker verification with ad-hoc microphone arrays

Chengdong Liang, Junqi Chen, Shanzheng Guan et al.

Recently, ad-hoc microphone array has been widely studied. Unlike traditional microphone array settings, the spatial arrangement and number of microphones of ad-hoc microphone arrays are not known in advance, which hinders the adaptation of traditional speaker verification technologies to ad-hoc microphone arrays. To overcome this weakness, in this paper, we propose attention-based multi-channel speaker verification with ad-hoc microphone arrays. Specifically, we add an inter-channel processing layer and a global fusion layer after the pooling layer of a single-channel speaker verification system. The inter-channel processing layer applies a so-called residual self-attention along the channel dimension for allocating weights to different microphones. The global fusion layer integrates all channels in a way that is independent to the number of the input channels. We further replace the softmax operator in the residual self-attention with sparsemax, which forces the channel weights of very noisy channels to zero. Experimental results with ad-hoc microphone arrays of over 30 channels demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methods. For example, the multi-channel speaker verification with sparsemax achieves an equal error rate (EER) of over 20% lower than oracle one-best system on semi-real data sets, and over 30% lower on simulation data sets, in test scenarios with both matched and mismatched channel numbers.

SDJan 16, 2021
Minimum-volume Multichannel Nonnegative matrix factorization for blind source separation

Jianyu Wang, Shanzheng Guan, Shupei Liu et al.

Multichannel blind audio source separation aims to recover the latent sources from their multichannel mixtures without supervised information. One state-of-the-art blind audio source separation method, named independent low-rank matrix analysis (ILRMA), unifies independent vector analysis (IVA) and nonnegative matrix factorization (NMF). However, the spectra matrix produced from NMF may not find a compact spectral basis. It may not guarantee the identifiability of each source as well. To address this problem, here we propose to enhance the identifiability of the source model by a minimum-volume prior distribution. We further regularize a multichannel NMF (MNMF) and ILRMA respectively with the minimum-volume regularizer. The proposed methods maximize the posterior distribution of the separated sources, which ensures the stability of the convergence. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methods compared with auxiliary independent vector analysis, MNMF, ILRMA and its extensions.

SDDec 1, 2020
Deep Ad-hoc Beamforming Based on Speaker Extraction for Target-Dependent Speech Separation

Ziye Yang, Shanzheng Guan, Xiao-Lei Zhang

Recently, the research on ad-hoc microphone arrays with deep learning has drawn much attention, especially in speech enhancement and separation. Because an ad-hoc microphone array may cover such a large area that multiple speakers may locate far apart and talk independently, target-dependent speech separation, which aims to extract a target speaker from a mixed speech, is important for extracting and tracing a specific speaker in the ad-hoc array. However, this technique has not been explored yet. In this paper, we propose deep ad-hoc beamforming based on speaker extraction, which is to our knowledge the first work for target-dependent speech separation based on ad-hoc microphone arrays and deep learning. The algorithm contains three components. First, we propose a supervised channel selection framework based on speaker extraction, where the estimated utterance-level SNRs of the target speech are used as the basis for the channel selection. Second, we apply the selected channels to a deep learning based MVDR algorithm, where a single-channel speaker extraction algorithm is applied to each selected channel for estimating the mask of the target speech. We conducted an extensive experiment on a WSJ0-adhoc corpus. Experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.