Title :
Early investigations into subjective audio quality assessment using brainwave responses
Author :
Creusere, Charles D. ; Siddenki, Srikant R. ; Hardin, Joe ; Kroger, Jim
Author_Institution :
Klipsch Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., New Mexico State Univ., Las Cruces, NM, USA
Abstract :
In this work, we take the first steps towards quantifying changes in the perceived quality of audio by directly measuring human brainwave responses using a high-resolution electroencephelograph (EEG). Specifically, human subjects are presented with audio whose quality varies with time while being monitored by a 128-channel EEG; some of the time, they move a slider bar up and down to indicate their perception of the changing quality while at other times they listen passively. Our focus here is to identify low-level features in the brainwave responses that correlate well with temporal quality variations across multiple base audio sequences and different test subjects. We consider two approaches for quality classification, one based on cross-correlation of the spectrally-averaged signals and the other based on time-space-frequency power distributions. Using a perceptually-weighted error criterion, we find that the error varies between 0.177 and 0.227 for the time-space-frequency approach and 0.0569 and 0.0723 for the cross-correlation approach. We note, however, that the latter approach is operating within the training set while the former is not, so the comparison between these two approaches is somewhat misleading.
Keywords :
correlation methods; electroencephalography; feature extraction; medical signal processing; signal classification; 128-channel EEG; audio perceived quality; high-resolution electroencephelograph; human brainwave responses; low-level feature identification; multiple base audio sequences; perceptually-weighted error criterion; quality classification; spectrally-averaged signal cross-correlation; subjective audio quality assessment; temporal quality variations; time-space-frequency approach; time-space-frequency power distributions; Educational institutions; Electroencephalography; Humans; Prototypes; Testing; Training; Vectors;
Conference_Titel :
Signals, Systems and Computers (ASILOMAR), 2011 Conference Record of the Forty Fifth Asilomar Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pacific Grove, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0321-7
DOI :
10.1109/ACSSC.2011.6190043