CATEGORY:
Research, Moderation
TITLE:
Novel Architectures for Unsupervised Information Bottleneck Based Speaker Diarization of Meetings
DESCRIPTION:
Speaker diarization is an important problem that is topical, and is especially useful as a preprocessor for conversational speech related applications. The objective of this article is two-fold: (i) segment initialization by uniformly distributing speaker information across the initial segments, and (ii) incorporating speaker discriminative features within the unsupervised diarization framework. In the first part of the work, a varying length segment initialization technique for Information Bottleneck (IB) based speaker diarization system using phoneme rate as the side information is proposed. This initialization distributes speaker information uniformly across the segments and provides a better starting point for IB based clustering. In the second part of the work, we present a Two-Pass Information Bottleneck (TPIB) based speaker diarization system that incorporates speaker discriminative features during the process of diarization. The TPIB based speaker diarization system has shown improvement over the baseline IB based system. During the first pass of the TPIB system, a coarse segmentation is performed using IB based clustering. The alignments obtained are used to generate speaker discriminative features using a shallow feed-forward neural network and linear discriminant analysis. The discriminative features obtained are used in the second pass to obtain the final speaker boundaries. In the final part of the paper, variable segment initialization is combined with the TPIB framework. This leverages the advantages of better segment initialization and speaker discriminative features that results in an additional improvement in performance. An evaluation on standard meeting datasets shows that a significant absolute improvement of 3.9% and 4.7% is obtained on the NIST and AMI datasets, respectively.
SOURCE:
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio Speech and Language Processing
ID:
a221ec4e23ae8edbe1729baecc5b78bbhttp://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9250017
DATE – PUBLISHED:
2021
DATE – DOI:
DATE – RETRIEVED:
12/26/20 03:24PM
LINK – PUBLISHER:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9250017
LINK – OTHER:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9250017
REFERENCE:
Audiology Tracker, Urgent Research, Hearing Tracker, 2020-12-26T20:24:45+00:00, https://www.audiologytracker.com.