ASAILGSDJun 20, 2023

Factors Affecting the Performance of Automated Speaker Verification in Alzheimer's Disease Clinical Trials

arXiv:2306.12444v1222 citationsh-index: 21
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of duplicate patient detection in Alzheimer's disease clinical trials, which is crucial for trial credibility and safety, but it is incremental as it analyzes existing factors rather than proposing a new method.

The study investigated how demographic factors, audio quality, and Alzheimer's disease severity affect automated speaker verification (ASV) performance in clinical trials, finding that ASV accuracy varies by gender, age, and disease severity, with performance degrading for older individuals and those with more severe AD.

Detecting duplicate patient participation in clinical trials is a major challenge because repeated patients can undermine the credibility and accuracy of the trial's findings and result in significant health and financial risks. Developing accurate automated speaker verification (ASV) models is crucial to verify the identity of enrolled individuals and remove duplicates, but the size and quality of data influence ASV performance. However, there has been limited investigation into the factors that can affect ASV capabilities in clinical environments. In this paper, we bridge the gap by conducting analysis of how participant demographic characteristics, audio quality criteria, and severity level of Alzheimer's disease (AD) impact the performance of ASV utilizing a dataset of speech recordings from 659 participants with varying levels of AD, obtained through multiple speech tasks. Our results indicate that ASV performance: 1) is slightly better on male speakers than on female speakers; 2) degrades for individuals who are above 70 years old; 3) is comparatively better for non-native English speakers than for native English speakers; 4) is negatively affected by clinician interference, noisy background, and unclear participant speech; 5) tends to decrease with an increase in the severity level of AD. Our study finds that voice biometrics raise fairness concerns as certain subgroups exhibit different ASV performances owing to their inherent voice characteristics. Moreover, the performance of ASV is influenced by the quality of speech recordings, which underscores the importance of improving the data collection settings in clinical trials.

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