Title :
Preference for 20-40 ms window duration in speech analysis
Author :
Paliwal, Kuldip K. ; Lyons, James G. ; Wójcicki, Kamil K.
Author_Institution :
Signal Process. Lab., Griffith Univ., Nathan, QLD, Australia
Abstract :
In speech processing the short-time magnitude spectrum is believed to contain most of the information about speech intelligibility and it is normally computed using the short-time Fourier transform over 20-40 ms window duration. In this paper, we investigate the effect of the analysis window duration on speech intelligibility in a systematic way. For this purpose, both subjective and objective experiments are conducted. The subjective experiment is in a form of a consonant recognition task by human listeners, whereas the objective experiment is in a form of an automatic speech recognition (ASR) task. In our experiments various analysis window durations are investigated. For the subjective experiment we construct speech stimuli based purely on the short-time magnitude information. The results of the subjective experiment show that the analysis window duration of 15-35 ms is the optimum choice when speech is reconstructed from the short-time magnitude spectrum. Similar conclusions were made based on the results of the objective (ASR) experiment. The ASR results were found to have statistically significant correlation with the subjective intelligibility results.
Keywords :
Fourier transforms; speech intelligibility; speech recognition; ASR; automatic speech recognition; short-time Fourier transform; short-time magnitude spectrum; speech analysis; speech intelligibility; speech processing; speech stimuli; time 20 ms to 40 ms; window duration analysis; Automatic speech recognition; Correlation; Humans; Speech; Speech processing; Training; Analysis window duration; automatic speech recognition; magnitude spectrum; speech intelligibility;
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing and Communication Systems (ICSPCS), 2010 4th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Gold Coast, QLD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7908-5
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7906-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICSPCS.2010.5709770