A Comparative Study of Glottal Source Estimation Techniques

12/28/2019
by   Thomas Drugman, et al.
0

Source-tract decomposition (or glottal flow estimation) is one of the basic problems of speech processing. For this, several techniques have been proposed in the literature. However studies comparing different approaches are almost nonexistent. Besides, experiments have been systematically performed either on synthetic speech or on sustained vowels. In this study we compare three of the main representative state-of-the-art methods of glottal flow estimation: closed-phase inverse filtering, iterative and adaptive inverse filtering, and mixed-phase decomposition. These techniques are first submitted to an objective assessment test on synthetic speech signals. Their sensitivity to various factors affecting the estimation quality, as well as their robustness to noise are studied. In a second experiment, their ability to label voice quality (tensed, modal, soft) is studied on a large corpus of real connected speech. It is shown that changes of voice quality are reflected by significant modifications in glottal feature distributions. Techniques based on the mixed-phase decomposition and on a closed-phase inverse filtering process turn out to give the best results on both clean synthetic and real speech signals. On the other hand, iterative and adaptive inverse filtering is recommended in noisy environments for its high robustness.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
05/24/2020

Glottal source estimation robustness: A comparison of sensitivity of voice source estimation techniques

This paper addresses the problem of estimating the voice source directly...
research
12/29/2019

Complex Cepstrum-based Decomposition of Speech for Glottal Source Estimation

Homomorphic analysis is a well-known method for the separation of non-li...
research
12/21/2017

On the Use of a Spectral Glottal Model for the Source-filter Separation of Speech

The estimation of glottal flow from a speech waveform is a key method fo...
research
12/30/2019

Causal-Anticausal Decomposition of Speech using Complex Cepstrum for Glottal Source Estimation

Complex cepstrum is known in the literature for linearly separating caus...
research
05/10/2020

Chirp Complex Cepstrum-based Decomposition for Asynchronous Glottal Analysis

It was recently shown that complex cepstrum can be effectively used for ...
research
12/29/2019

A Comparative Study of Pitch Extraction Algorithms on a Large Variety of Singing Sounds

The problem of pitch tracking has been extensively studied in the speech...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset