DocumentCode
2696748
Title
Accounting for Correlation in Linguistic-Acoustic Likelihood Ratio-based Forensic Speaker Discrimination
Author
Rose, Phil
Author_Institution
Fac. of Arts, Australian Nat. Univ.
fYear
2006
fDate
28-30 June 2006
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
8
Abstract
The necessity of taking correlation between variables into account when estimating strength of forensic speaker recognition evidence is argued for. A modest forensic speaker discrimination experiment is described which investigates how well non-contemporaneous speech samples from the same speaker can be discriminated from different-speaker samples using bivariate kernel density likelihood ratios from F2 and F3 of the five monophthongal phonemes of General Australian English, spoken by 11 males. The experiment shows that an approach which takes the correlation of variables into account can yield useful strengths of evidence. It is also pointed out that the results of such tests still require evaluation with the appropriate confidence limits
Keywords
acoustic correlation; linguistics; natural languages; signal sampling; speaker recognition; General Australian English; bivariate kernel density; correlation accounting; forensic speaker recognition; linguistic-acoustic likelihood ratio; monophthongal phoneme; speech samples; Art; Australia; Cepstral analysis; Forensics; Frequency; Kernel; Laboratories; Speaker recognition; Speech analysis; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Speaker and Language Recognition Workshop, 2006. IEEE Odyssey 2006: The
Conference_Location
San Juan
Print_ISBN
1-424400471-1
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0472-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ODYSSEY.2006.248095
Filename
4013512
Link To Document