Publications

Refine Results

(Filters Applied) Clear All

The MITLL NIST LRE 2011 language recognition system

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory (MITLL) language recognition system developed for the NIST 2011 Language Recognition Evaluation (LRE). The submitted system consisted of a fusion of four core classifiers, three based on spectral similarity and one based on tokenization. Additional system improvements were achieved following the submission deadline. In a major departure from previous evaluations, the 2011 LRE task focused on closed-set pairwise performance so as to emphasize a system's ability to distinguish confusable language pairs. Results are presented for the 24-language confusable pair task at test utterance durations of 30, 10, and 3 seconds. Results are also shown using the standard detection metrics (DET, minDCF) and it is demonstrated the previous metrics adequately cover difficult pair performance. On the 30 s 24-language confusable pair task, the submitted and post-evaluation systems achieved average costs of 0.079 and 0.070 and standard detection costs of 0.038 and 0.033.
READ LESS

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory (MITLL) language recognition system developed for the NIST 2011 Language Recognition Evaluation (LRE). The submitted system consisted of a fusion of four core classifiers, three based on spectral similarity and one based on tokenization. Additional system improvements were achieved following...

READ MORE

Automatic detection of depression in speech using Gaussian mixture modeling with factor analysis

Summary

Of increasing importance in the civilian and military population is the recognition of Major Depressive Disorder at its earliest stages and intervention before the onset of severe symptoms. Toward the goal of more effective monitoring of depression severity, we investigate automatic classifiers of depression state, that have the important property of mitigating nuisances due to data variability, such as speaker and channel effects, unrelated to levels of depression. To assess our measures, we use a 35-speaker free-response speech database of subjects treated for depression over a six-week duration, along with standard clinical HAMD depression ratings. Preliminary experiments indicate that by mitigating nuisances, thus focusing on depression severity as a class, we can significantly improve classification accuracy over baseline Gaussian-mixture-model-based classifiers.
READ LESS

Summary

Of increasing importance in the civilian and military population is the recognition of Major Depressive Disorder at its earliest stages and intervention before the onset of severe symptoms. Toward the goal of more effective monitoring of depression severity, we investigate automatic classifiers of depression state, that have the important property...

READ MORE

Language recognition via i-vectors and dimensionality reduction

Published in:
2011 INTERSPEECH, 27-31 August 2011, pp. 857-860.

Summary

In this paper, a new language identification system is presented based on the total variability approach previously developed in the field of speaker identification. Various techniques are employed to extract the most salient features in the lower dimensional i-vector space and the system developed results in excellent performance on the 2009 LRE evaluation set without the need for any post-processing or backend techniques. Additional performance gains are observed when the system is combined with other acoustic systems.
READ LESS

Summary

In this paper, a new language identification system is presented based on the total variability approach previously developed in the field of speaker identification. Various techniques are employed to extract the most salient features in the lower dimensional i-vector space and the system developed results in excellent performance on the...

READ MORE

Informative dialect recognition using context-dependent pronunciation modeling

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, ICASSP, 22-27 May 2011, pp. 4396-4399.

Summary

We propose an informative dialect recognition system that learns phonetic transformation rules, and uses them to identify dialects. A hidden Markov model is used to align reference phones with dialect specific pronunciations to characterize when and how often substitutions, insertions, and deletions occur. Decision tree clustering is used to find context-dependent phonetic rules. We ran recognition tasks on 4 Arabic dialects. Not only do the proposed systems perform well on their own, but when fused with baselines they improve performance by 21-36% relative. In addition, our proposed decision-tree system beats the baseline monophone system in recovering phonetic rules by 21% relative. Pronunciation rules learned by our proposed system quantify the occurrence frequency of known rules, and suggest rule candidates for further linguistic studies.
READ LESS

Summary

We propose an informative dialect recognition system that learns phonetic transformation rules, and uses them to identify dialects. A hidden Markov model is used to align reference phones with dialect specific pronunciations to characterize when and how often substitutions, insertions, and deletions occur. Decision tree clustering is used to find...

READ MORE

The MIT LL 2010 speaker recognition evaluation system: scalable language-independent speaker recognition

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, ICASSP, 22-27 May 2011, pp. 5272-5275.

Summary

Research in the speaker recognition community has continued to address methods of mitigating variational nuisances. Telephone and auxiliary-microphone recorded speech emphasize the need for a robust way of dealing with unwanted variation. The design of recent 2010 NIST-SRE Speaker Recognition Evaluation (SRE) reflects this research emphasis. In this paper, we present the MIT submission applied to the tasks of the 2010 NIST-SRE with two main goals--language-independent scalable modeling and robust nuisance mitigation. For modeling, exclusive use of inner product-based and cepstral systems produced a language-independent computationally-scalable system. For robustness, systems that captured spectral and prosodic information, modeled nuisance subspaces using multiple novel methods, and fused scores of multiple systems were implemented. The performance of the system is presented on a subset of the NIST SRE 2010 core tasks.
READ LESS

Summary

Research in the speaker recognition community has continued to address methods of mitigating variational nuisances. Telephone and auxiliary-microphone recorded speech emphasize the need for a robust way of dealing with unwanted variation. The design of recent 2010 NIST-SRE Speaker Recognition Evaluation (SRE) reflects this research emphasis. In this paper, we...

READ MORE

The MITLL NIST LRE 2009 language recognition system

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, ICASSP, 15 March 2010, pp. 4994-4997.

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory language recognition system submitted to the NIST 2009 Language Recognition Evaluation (LRE). This system consists of a fusion of three core recognizers, two based on spectral similarity and one based on tokenization. The 2009 LRE differed from previous ones in that test data included narrowband segments from worldwide Voice of America broadcasts as well as conventional recorded conversational telephone speech. Results are presented for the 23-language closed-set and open-set detection tasks at the 30, 10, and 3 second durations along with a discussion of the language-pair task. On the 30 second 23-language closed set detection task, the system achieved a 1.64 average error rate.
READ LESS

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory language recognition system submitted to the NIST 2009 Language Recognition Evaluation (LRE). This system consists of a fusion of three core recognizers, two based on spectral similarity and one based on tokenization. The 2009 LRE differed from previous ones in...

READ MORE

Discriminative N-gram selection for dialect recognition

Summary

Dialect recognition is a challenging and multifaceted problem. Distinguishing between dialects can rely upon many tiers of interpretation of speech data - e.g., prosodic, phonetic, spectral, and word. High-accuracy automatic methods for dialect recognition typically rely upon either phonetic or spectral characteristics of the input. A challenge with spectral system, such as those based on shifted-delta cepstral coefficients, is that they achieve good performance but do not provide insight into distinctive dialect features. In this work, a novel method based upon discriminative training and phone N- grams is proposed. This approach achieves excellent classification performance, fuses well with other systems, and has interpretable dialect characteristics in the phonetic tier. The method is demonstrated on data from the LDC and prior NIST language recognition evaluations. The method is also combined with spectral methods to demonstrate state-of-the-art performance in dialect recognition.
READ LESS

Summary

Dialect recognition is a challenging and multifaceted problem. Distinguishing between dialects can rely upon many tiers of interpretation of speech data - e.g., prosodic, phonetic, spectral, and word. High-accuracy automatic methods for dialect recognition typically rely upon either phonetic or spectral characteristics of the input. A challenge with spectral system...

READ MORE

A comparison of subspace feature-domain methods for language recognition

Summary

Compensation of cepstral features for mismatch due to dissimilar train and test conditions has been critical for good performance in many speech applications. Mismatch is typically due to variability from changes in speaker, channel, gender, and environment. Common methods for compensation include RASTA, mean and variance normalization, VTLN, and feature warping. Recently, a new class of subspace methods for model compensation have become popular in language and speaker recognition--nuisance attribute projection (NAP) and factor analysis. A feature space version of latent factor analysis has been proposed. In this work, a feature space version of NAP is presented. This new approach, fNAP, is contrasted with feature domain latent factor analysis (fLFA). Both of these methods are applied to a NIST language recognition task. Results show the viability of the new fNAP method. Also, results indicate when the different methods perform best.
READ LESS

Summary

Compensation of cepstral features for mismatch due to dissimilar train and test conditions has been critical for good performance in many speech applications. Mismatch is typically due to variability from changes in speaker, channel, gender, and environment. Common methods for compensation include RASTA, mean and variance normalization, VTLN, and feature...

READ MORE

Eigen-channel compensation and discriminatively trained Gaussian mixture models for dialect and accent recognition

Published in:
Proc. INTERSPEECH 2008, 22-26 September 2008, pp. 723-726.

Summary

This paper presents a series of dialect/accent identification results for three sets of dialects with discriminatively trained Gaussian mixture models and feature compensation using eigen-channel decomposition. The classification tasks evaluated in the paper include: 1)the Chinese language classes, 2) American and Indian accented English and 3) discrimination between three Arabic dialects. The first two tasks were evaluated on the 2007 NIST LRE corpus. The Arabic discrimination task was evaluated using data derived from the LDC Arabic set collected by Appen. Analysis is performed for the English accent problem studied and an approach to open set dialect scoring is introduced. The system resulted in equal error rates at or below 10% for each of the tasks studied.
READ LESS

Summary

This paper presents a series of dialect/accent identification results for three sets of dialects with discriminatively trained Gaussian mixture models and feature compensation using eigen-channel decomposition. The classification tasks evaluated in the paper include: 1)the Chinese language classes, 2) American and Indian accented English and 3) discrimination between three Arabic...

READ MORE

The MITLL NIST LRE 2007 language recognition system

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory language recognition system submitted to the NIST 2007 Language Recognition Evaluation. This system consists of a fusion of four core recognizers, two based on tokenization and two based on spectral similarity. Results for NIST?s 14-language detection task are presented for both the closed-set and open-set tasks and for the 30, 10 and 3 second durations. On the 30 second 14-language closed set detection task, the system achieves a 1% equal error rate.
READ LESS

Summary

This paper presents a description of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory language recognition system submitted to the NIST 2007 Language Recognition Evaluation. This system consists of a fusion of four core recognizers, two based on tokenization and two based on spectral similarity. Results for NIST?s 14-language detection task are presented for...

READ MORE