DocumentCode :
1757357
Title :
Optimal Near-End Speech Intelligibility Improvement Incorporating Additive Noise and Late Reverberation Under an Approximation of the Short-Time SII
Author :
Hendriks, Richard C. ; Crespo, Joao B. ; Jensen, Jesper ; Taal, Cees H.
Author_Institution :
Signal & InformationProcessing Lab., Delft Univ. of Technol., Delft, Netherlands
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
fYear :
2015
fDate :
42125
Firstpage :
851
Lastpage :
862
Abstract :
The presence of environmental additive noise in the vicinity of the user typically degrades the speech intelligibility of speech processing applications. This intelligibility loss can be compensated by properly preprocessing the speech signal prior to play-out, often referred to as near-end speech enhancement. Although the majority of such algorithms focus primarily on the presence of additive noise, reverberation can also severely degrade intelligibility. In this paper we investigate how late reverberation and additive noise can be jointly taken into account in the near-end speech enhancement process. For this effort we use a recently presented approximation of the speech intelligibility index under a power constraint, which we optimize for speech degraded by both additive noise and late reverberation. The algorithm results in time-frequency dependent amplification factors that depend on both the additive noise power spectral density as well as the late reverberation energy. These amplification factors redistribute speech energy across frequency and perform a dynamic range compression. Experimental results using both instrumental intelligibility measures as well as intelligibility listening tests show that the proposed approach improves speech intelligibility over state-of-the-art reference methods when speech signals are degraded simultaneously by additive noise and reverberation. Speech intelligibility improvements in the order of 20% are observed.
Keywords :
data compression; noise (working environment); reverberation; speech coding; speech enhancement; speech intelligibility; time-frequency analysis; SII; dynamic range compression; environmental additive noise power spectral density; late reverberation; near-end speech enhancement; power constraint; speech energy redistribution; speech intelligibility index approximation; speech processing application; time-frequency dependent amplification factor; Additive noise; Approximation methods; Reverberation; Speech; Speech processing; Time-frequency analysis; Additive noise; approximated speech intelligibility index (SII); late reverberation; speech intelligibility;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, IEEE/ACM Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
2329-9290
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TASLP.2015.2409780
Filename :
7055839
Link To Document :
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