ASCLSDAug 7, 2020

Applying Speech Tempo-Derived Features, BoAW and Fisher Vectors to Detect Elderly Emotion and Speech in Surgical Masks

arXiv:2008.03183v1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses emotion recognition for elderly individuals and mask detection, but it is incremental as it builds on existing features and methods.

The paper tackled emotion detection in elderly speakers and mask-wearing detection by extracting speech tempo features from ASR outputs, achieving significantly improved arousal and valence values in the Elderly Emotion Sub-Challenge, though the mask detection hypothesis was not supported.

The 2020 INTERSPEECH Computational Paralinguistics Challenge (ComParE) consists of three Sub-Challenges, where the tasks are to identify the level of arousal and valence of elderly speakers, determine whether the actual speaker wearing a surgical mask, and estimate the actual breathing of the speaker. In our contribution to the Challenge, we focus on the Elderly Emotion and the Mask sub-challenges. Besides utilizing standard or close-to-standard features such as ComParE functionals, Bag-of-Audio-Words and Fisher vectors, we exploit that emotion is related to the velocity of speech (i.e. speech rate). To utilize this, we perform phone-level recognition using an ASR system, and extract features from the output such as articulation tempo, speech tempo, and various attributes measuring the amount of pauses. We also hypothesize that wearing a surgical mask makes the speaker feel uneasy, leading to a slower speech rate and more hesitations; hence, we experiment with the same features in the Mask sub-challenge as well. Although this theory was not justified by the experimental results on the Mask Sub-Challenge, in the Elderly Emotion Sub-Challenge we got significantly improved arousal and valence values with this feature type both on the development set and in cross-validation.

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