DocumentCode
312314
Title
Incremental speaker adaptation with minimum error discriminative training for speaker identification
Author
Álamo, C. Martín del ; Álvarez, J. ; de la Torre, C. ; Poyatos, F.J. ; Hernández, L.
Author_Institution
Speech Technol. Group, Telefonica Investigacion y Desarrollo, Madrid, Spain
Volume
3
fYear
1996
fDate
3-6 Oct 1996
Firstpage
1760
Abstract
The minimum classification error (MCE) has been shown to be effective in improving the performance of a speaker identification system. However, there are still problems to solve, such as the variability of the voice characteristics of a particular speaker through time. In this paper, we analyze the degradation of a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) based text-independent speaker identification system when using test data recorded over six months after the training session, and, in an attempt to avoid this degradation, we study the use of supervised adaptation based on maximum a posteriori (MAP) estimation and MCE. These techniques have been shown to provide good results for speaker adaptation in speech recognition. The major result we have obtained is that, by starting with GMM models trained with only speech from session 1, similar identification results can be obtained for all the other sessions using an incremental adaptation using only 2.5 seconds of speech per speaker and session as data for the MCE training adaptation procedure. We have also found that, in our extreme experimental setup, MAP becomes unhelpful when combined with MCE adaptation
Keywords
Gaussian distribution; errors; maximum likelihood estimation; pattern classification; speaker recognition; 2.5 s; GMM-based text-independent speaker identification system; Gaussian mixture model; incremental speaker adaptation; maximum a posteriori estimation; minimum classification error; minimum error discriminative training; performance; speech recognition; supervised adaptation; system degradation; training adaptation procedure; voice characteristics; Cepstral analysis; Databases; Density functional theory; Hidden Markov models; Linear predictive coding; Loss measurement; Parameter estimation; Speaker recognition; State estimation; Training data;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3555-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607969
Filename
607969
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