CVOct 4, 2016

Feature Learning from Spectrograms for Assessment of Personality Traits

arXiv:1610.01223v130 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of simplifying feature extraction for personality assessment from speech, which is incremental as it builds on existing methods but introduces a more efficient approach.

The paper tackles the problem of automatically inferring personality traits from speech by proposing a feature learning method from spectrograms, which achieves state-of-the-art results with a significant reduction in complexity compared to reference methods.

Several methods have recently been proposed to analyze speech and automatically infer the personality of the speaker. These methods often rely on prosodic and other hand crafted speech processing features extracted with off-the-shelf toolboxes. To achieve high accuracy, numerous features are typically extracted using complex and highly parameterized algorithms. In this paper, a new method based on feature learning and spectrogram analysis is proposed to simplify the feature extraction process while maintaining a high level of accuracy. The proposed method learns a dictionary of discriminant features from patches extracted in the spectrogram representations of training speech segments. Each speech segment is then encoded using the dictionary, and the resulting feature set is used to perform classification of personality traits. Experiments indicate that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art results with a significant reduction in complexity when compared to the most recent reference methods. The number of features, and difficulties linked to the feature extraction process are greatly reduced as only one type of descriptors is used, for which the 6 parameters can be tuned automatically. In contrast, the simplest reference method uses 4 types of descriptors to which 6 functionals are applied, resulting in over 20 parameters to be tuned.

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