Dual-Path Cross-Modal Attention for better Audio-Visual Speech Extraction
This work addresses a specific bottleneck in audio-visual speech extraction for improving speech separation in noisy environments, representing an incremental advancement.
The paper tackles the problem of fusing audio and video features with different time resolutions in audio-visual speech extraction by proposing a dual-path cross-modal attention method that avoids upsampling visual cues, achieving superior results compared to other time-domain models.
Audio-visual target speech extraction, which aims to extract a certain speaker's speech from the noisy mixture by looking at lip movements, has made significant progress combining time-domain speech separation models and visual feature extractors (CNN). One problem of fusing audio and video information is that they have different time resolutions. Most current research upsamples the visual features along the time dimension so that audio and video features are able to align in time. However, we believe that lip movement should mostly contain long-term, or phone-level information. Based on this assumption, we propose a new way to fuse audio-visual features. We observe that for DPRNN \cite{dprnn}, the interchunk dimension's time resolution could be very close to the time resolution of video frames. Like \cite{sepformer}, the LSTM in DPRNN is replaced by intra-chunk and inter-chunk self-attention, but in the proposed algorithm, inter-chunk attention incorporates the visual features as an additional feature stream. This prevents the upsampling of visual cues, resulting in more efficient audio-visual fusion. The result shows we achieve superior results compared with other time-domain based audio-visual fusion models.