Controlling the Remixing of Separated Dialogue with a Non-Intrusive Quality Estimate
This work addresses audio quality control in source separation applications, offering an incremental improvement for scenarios like dialogue enhancement.
This paper tackles the problem of balancing interferer attenuation and audible deteriorations in remixing separated audio sources by proposing a non-intrusive audio quality estimation method to control this trade-off adaptively. The result shows that the method successfully maximizes interferer attenuation under quality constraints, with gains differing by up to 23 dB in listening tests.
Remixing separated audio sources trades off interferer attenuation against the amount of audible deteriorations. This paper proposes a non-intrusive audio quality estimation method for controlling this trade-off in a signal-adaptive manner. The recently proposed 2f-model is adopted as the underlying quality measure, since it has been shown to correlate strongly with basic audio quality in source separation. An alternative operation mode of the measure is proposed, more appropriate when considering material with long inactive periods of the target source. The 2f-model requires the reference target source as an input, but this is not available in many applications. Deep neural networks (DNNs) are trained to estimate the 2f-model intrusively using the reference target (iDNN2f), non-intrusively using the input mix as reference (nDNN2f), and reference-free using only the separated output signal (rDNN2f). It is shown that iDNN2f achieves very strong correlation with the original measure on the test data (Pearson r=0.99), while performance decreases for nDNN2f (r>=0.91) and rDNN2f (r>=0.82). The non-intrusive estimate nDNN2f is mapped to select item-dependent remixing gains with the aim of maximizing the interferer attenuation under a constraint on the minimum quality of the remixed output (e.g., audible but not annoying deteriorations). A listening test shows that this is successfully achieved even with very different selected gains (up to 23 dB difference).