Maximilian Strake

2papers

2 Papers

ASNov 6, 2021
Deep Noise Suppression Maximizing Non-Differentiable PESQ Mediated by a Non-Intrusive PESQNet

Ziyi Xu, Maximilian Strake, Tim Fingscheidt

Speech enhancement employing deep neural networks (DNNs) for denoising are called deep noise suppression (DNS). During training, DNS methods are typically trained with mean squared error (MSE) type loss functions, which do not guarantee good perceptual quality. Perceptual evaluation of speech quality (PESQ) is a widely used metric for evaluating speech quality. However, the original PESQ algorithm is non-differentiable, and therefore cannot directly be used as optimization criterion for gradient-based learning. In this work, we propose an end-to-end non-intrusive PESQNet DNN to estimate the PESQ scores of the enhanced speech signal. Thus, by providing a reference-free perceptual loss, it serves as a mediator towards the DNS training, allowing to maximize the PESQ score of the enhanced speech signal. We illustrate the potential of our proposed PESQNet-mediated training on the basis of an already strong baseline DNS. As further novelty, we propose to train the DNS and the PESQNet alternatingly to keep the PESQNet up-to-date and perform well specifically for the DNS under training. Our proposed method is compared to the same DNS trained with MSE-based loss for joint denoising and dereverberation, and the Interspeech 2021 DNS Challenge baseline. Detailed analysis shows that the PESQNet mediation can further increase the DNS performance by about 0.1 PESQ points on synthetic test data and by 0.03 DNSMOS points on real test data, compared to training with the MSE-based loss. Our proposed method also outperforms the Challenge baseline by 0.2 PESQ points on synthetic test data and 0.1 DNSMOS points on real test data.

ASMar 31, 2021
Y$^2$-Net FCRN for Acoustic Echo and Noise Suppression

Ernst Seidel, Jan Franzen, Maximilian Strake et al.

In recent years, deep neural networks (DNNs) were studied as an alternative to traditional acoustic echo cancellation (AEC) algorithms. The proposed models achieved remarkable performance for the separate tasks of AEC and residual echo suppression (RES). A promising network topology is a fully convolutional recurrent network (FCRN) structure, which has already proven its performance on both noise suppression and AEC tasks, individually. However, the combination of AEC, postfiltering, and noise suppression to a single network typically leads to a noticeable decline in the quality of the near-end speech component due to the lack of a separate loss for echo estimation. In this paper, we propose a two-stage model (Y$^2$-Net) which consists of two FCRNs, each with two inputs and one output (Y-Net). The first stage (AEC) yields an echo estimate, which - as a novelty for a DNN AEC model - is further used by the second stage to perform RES and noise suppression. While the subjective listening test of the Interspeech 2021 AEC Challenge mostly yielded results close to the baseline, the proposed method scored an average improvement of 0.46 points over the baseline on the blind testset in double-talk on the instrumental metric DECMOS, provided by the challenge organizers.