• Title/Summary/Keyword: class-based histogram equalization

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Class-Based Histogram Equalization for Robust Speech Recognition

  • Suh, Young-Joo;Kim, Hoi-Rin
    • ETRI Journal
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.502-505
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    • 2006
  • A new class-based histogram equalization method is proposed for robust speech recognition. The proposed method aims at not only compensating the acoustic mismatch between training and test environments, but also at reducing the discrepancy between the phonetic distributions of training and test speech data. The algorithm utilizes multiple class-specific reference and test cumulative distribution functions, classifies the noisy test features into their corresponding classes, and equalizes the features by using their corresponding class-specific reference and test distributions. Experiments on the Aurora 2 database proved the effectiveness of the proposed method by reducing relative errors by 18.74%, 17.52%, and 23.45% over the conventional histogram equalization method and by 59.43%, 66.00%, and 50.50% over mel-cepstral-based features for test sets A, B, and C, respectively.

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Robust Speech Recognition by Utilizing Class Histogram Equalization (클래스 히스토그램 등화 기법에 의한 강인한 음성 인식)

  • Suh, Yung-Joo;Kim, Hor-Rin;Lee, Yun-Keun
    • MALSORI
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    • no.60
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    • pp.145-164
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    • 2006
  • This paper proposes class histogram equalization (CHEQ) to compensate noisy acoustic features for robust speech recognition. CHEQ aims to compensate for the acoustic mismatch between training and test speech recognition environments as well as to reduce the limitations of the conventional histogram equalization (HEQ). In contrast to HEQ, CHEQ adopts multiple class-specific distribution functions for training and test environments and equalizes the features by using their class-specific training and test distributions. According to the class-information extraction methods, CHEQ is further classified into two forms such as hard-CHEQ based on vector quantization and soft-CHEQ using the Gaussian mixture model. Experiments on the Aurora 2 database confirmed the effectiveness of CHEQ by producing a relative word error reduction of 61.17% over the baseline met-cepstral features and that of 19.62% over the conventional HEQ.

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