Sound Event Detection Guided by Semantic Contexts of Scenes
This work addresses sound event detection for applications like mobile devices and sensing technologies, offering an incremental improvement by enabling the use of unseen semantic contexts.
The paper tackles the problem of sound event detection (SED) by incorporating semantic contexts of scenes, such as 'home' or 'office', to improve accuracy, achieving improvements of 4.34 and 3.13 percentage points in micro and macro F-scores compared to conventional methods.
Some studies have revealed that contexts of scenes (e.g., "home," "office," and "cooking") are advantageous for sound event detection (SED). Mobile devices and sensing technologies give useful information on scenes for SED without the use of acoustic signals. However, conventional methods can employ pre-defined contexts in inference stages but not undefined contexts. This is because one-hot representations of pre-defined scenes are exploited as prior contexts for such conventional methods. To alleviate this problem, we propose scene-informed SED where pre-defined scene-agnostic contexts are available for more accurate SED. In the proposed method, pre-trained large-scale language models are utilized, which enables SED models to employ unseen semantic contexts of scenes in inference stages. Moreover, we investigated the extent to which the semantic representation of scene contexts is useful for SED. Experimental results performed with TUT Sound Events 2016/2017 and TUT Acoustic Scenes 2016/2017 datasets show that the proposed method improves micro and macro F-scores by 4.34 and 3.13 percentage points compared with conventional Conformer- and CNN--BiGRU-based SED, respectively.