Comparison of Gaussian process regression and Gaussian mixture models in spectral tilt modelling for intelligibility enhancement of telephone speech

Author(s):  
Emma Jokinen ◽  
Ulpu Remes ◽  
Paavo Alku
Entropy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 857
Author(s):  
Jinkai Tian ◽  
Peifeng Yan ◽  
Da Huang

Kernels play a crucial role in Gaussian process regression. Analyzing kernels from their spectral domain has attracted extensive attention in recent years. Gaussian mixture models (GMM) are used to model the spectrum of kernels. However, the number of components in a GMM is fixed. Thus, this model suffers from overfitting or underfitting. In this paper, we try to combine the spectral domain of kernels with nonparametric Bayesian models. Dirichlet processes mixture models are used to resolve this problem by changing the number of components according to the data size. Multiple experiments have been conducted on this model and it shows competitive performance.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (34n36) ◽  
pp. 1840096
Author(s):  
Jingyi Bao ◽  
Ning Xu

Voice conversion (VC) is a technique that aims to transform the individuality of a source speech so as to mimic that of a target speech while keeping the message unaltered. In our previous work, Gaussian process (GP) was introduced into the literature of VC for the first time, for the sake of overcoming the “over-fitting” problem inherent in the state-of-the-art VC methods, which gives very promising results. However, standard GP usually acts as somewhat a smoothing device more than a universal approximator. In this paper, we further attempt to improve the flexibility of GP-based VC by resorting to the expressive kernels that are derived to model the spectral density with Gaussian mixture model (GMM). Our new method benefits from the expressiveness of the new kernel while the inference of GP remains simple and analytic as usual. Experiments demonstrate both objectively and subjectively that the individualities of the converted speech are much more closer to those of the target while speech quality obtained is comparable to the standard GP-based method.


2020 ◽  
Vol 176 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-203
Author(s):  
Santosh Chapaneri ◽  
Deepak Jayaswal

Modeling the music mood has wide applications in music categorization, retrieval, and recommendation systems; however, it is challenging to computationally model the affective content of music due to its subjective nature. In this work, a structured regression framework is proposed to model the valence and arousal mood dimensions of music using a single regression model at a linear computational cost. To tackle the subjectivity phenomena, a confidence-interval based estimated consensus is computed by modeling the behavior of various annotators (e.g. biased, adversarial) and is shown to perform better than using the average annotation values. For a compact feature representation of music clips, variational Bayesian inference is used to learn the Gaussian mixture model representation of acoustic features and chord-related features are used to improve the valence estimation by probing the chord progressions between chroma frames. The dimensionality of features is further reduced using an adaptive version of kernel PCA. Using an efficient implementation of twin Gaussian process for structured regression, the proposed work achieves a significant improvement in R2 for arousal and valence dimensions relative to state-of-the-art techniques on two benchmark datasets for music mood estimation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 1399-1414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wanxia Deng ◽  
Huanxin Zou ◽  
Fang Guo ◽  
Lin Lei ◽  
Shilin Zhou ◽  
...  

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