An Objective Measure of Quality for Time-Scale Modification of Audio
Objective evaluation of audio processed with Time-Scale Modification (TSM) remains an open problem. Recently, a dataset of time-scaled audio with subjective quality labels was published and used to create an initial objective measure of quality. In this paper, an improved objective measure of quality for time-scaled audio is proposed. The measure uses hand-crafted features and a fully connected network to predict subjective mean opinion scores. Basic and Advanced Perceptual Evaluation of Audio Quality features are used in addition to nine features specific to TSM artefacts. Six methods of alignment are explored, with interpolation of the reference magnitude spectrum to the length of the test magnitude spectrum giving the best performance. The proposed measure achieves a mean Root Mean Squared Error of 0.487 and a mean Pearson correlation of 0.865, equivalent to 98th and 82nd percentiles of subjective sessions respectively. The proposed measure is used to evaluate time-scale modification algorithms, finding that Elastique gives the highest objective quality for Solo instrument and voice signals, while the Identity Phase-Locking Phase Vocoder gives the highest objective quality for music signals and the best overall quality. The objective measure is available at https://www.github.com/zygurt/TSM.
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