Paper ID | SPE-7.2 |
Paper Title |
ON THE DETECTION OF PITCH-SHIFTED VOICE: MACHINES AND HUMAN LISTENERS |
Authors |
David Looney, Nikolay D. Gaubitch, Pindrop, United Kingdom |
Session | SPE-7: Speaker Recognition 1: Benchmark Evaluation |
Location | Gather.Town |
Session Time: | Tuesday, 08 June, 14:00 - 14:45 |
Presentation Time: | Tuesday, 08 June, 14:00 - 14:45 |
Presentation |
Poster
|
Topic |
Speech Processing: [SPE-SPKR] Speaker Recognition and Characterization |
IEEE Xplore Open Preview |
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Virtual Presentation |
Click here to watch in the Virtual Conference |
Abstract |
We present a performance comparison between human listeners and a simple algorithm for the task of speech anomaly detection. The algorithm utilises an intentionally small set of features derived from the source-filter model, with the aim of validating that key components of source-filter theory characterise how humans perceive anomalies. We furthermore recognise that humans are adept at detecting anomalies without prior exposure to a given anomaly class. To that end, we also consider the algorithm performance when operating via the principle of unsupervised learning where a null model is derived from normal speech recordings. We evaluate both the algorithm and human listeners for pitch-shift detection where the pitch of a speech sample is intentionally modified using software, a phenomenon of relevance to the fields of fraud detection and forensics. Our results show that humans can only detect pitch-shift reliably at more extreme levels, and that the performance of the algorithm matches closely with that of humans. |