Ph.D. Dissertation Announcement: Pitch Tracking and Speech (Mingyang Wu )


Subject: Ph.D. Dissertation Announcement: Pitch Tracking and Speech
From:    Mingyang Wu  <mingyangwu(at)YAHOO.COM>
Date:    Thu, 28 Oct 2004 12:08:22 -0700

Dear colleagues, Please allow me to announce my Ph.D. dissertation titled "Pitch tracking and speech enhancement in noisy and reverberant environments", which was completed about a year ago. The abstract is shown as following: Two causes of speech degradation exist in practically all listening situations: noise interference and room reverberation. This dissertation investigates three particular aspects of speech processing in noisy and reverberant environments: multipitch tracking for noisy speech, measurement of reverberation time based on pitch strength, and reverberant speech enhancement using one microphone (or monaurally). An effective multipitch tracking algorithm for noisy speech is critical for speech analysis and processing. However, the performance of existing algorithms is not satisfactory. We present a robust algorithm for multipitch tracking of noisy speech. Our approach integrates an improved channel and peak selection method, a new method for extracting periodicity information across different channels, and a hidden Markov model (HMM) for forming continuous pitch tracks. The resulting algorithm can reliably track single and double pitch tracks in a noisy environment. We suggest a pitch error measure for the multipitch situation. The proposed algorithm is evaluated on a database of speech utterances mixed with various types of interference. Quantitative comparisons show that our algorithm significantly outperforms existing ones. Reverberation corrupts harmonic structure in voiced speech. We observe that the pitch strength of voiced speech segments is indicative of the degree of reverberation. Consequently, we present a pitch-based measure for reverberation time (T60) utilizing our new pitch determination algorithm. The pitch strength is measured by deriving the statistics of relative time lags, defined as the distances from the detected pitch periods to the closest peaks in correlograms. The monotonic relationship between the measured pitch strength and reverberation time is learned from a corpus of reverberant speech with known reverberation times. Under noise-free conditions, the quality of reverberant speech is dependent on two distinct perceptual components: coloration and long-term reverberation. They correspond to two physical variables: signal-to-reverberant energy ratio (SRR) and reverberation time, respectively. We propose a two-stage reverberant speech enhancement algorithm using one microphone. In the first stage, an inverse filter is estimated to reduce coloration effects so that SRR is increased. The second stage utilizes spectral subtraction to minimize the influence of long-term reverberation. The proposed algorithm significantly improves the quality of reverberant speech. Our algorithm is quantitatively compared with a recent one-microphone reverberant speech enhancement algorithm on a corpus of speech utterances in a number of reverberant conditions. The results show that our algorithm performs substantially better. The full dissertation also can be downloaded at: www.cse.ohio-state.edu/pnl/dissertations.html Regards, Mingyang Wu __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Address AutoComplete - You start. We finish. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail


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