Study and Development of Speech-Separation Techniques.

Abstract

One of the most common types of interference in speech communication is that caused by the speech of a competing talker. A technique has been developed for suppressing such interference by examining the Fourier transform of the input and selecting the harmonics of the desired voice. The initial version of this process was applicable only to vocalic speech (i.e., speech consisting only of vowels and vowel-like sounds), but in subsequent research steps have been taken to extend the process to natural (i.e., unrestricted) speech. This report describes the improvements which have been made in this research, first, to ruggedize the process so that it can perform in an natural-speech environment, second, to improve the intelligibility and naturalness of the recovered speech, and third, to enable the process to handle the non-vocalic speech sounds (such as plosives and fricatives) which occur in natural speech. (Author)

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 1978
Accession Number
ADA054952

Entities

People

  • Thomas W. Parsons

Organizations

  • New York University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accuracy
  • Acquisition
  • Databases
  • Detectors
  • Engineers
  • Environment
  • Errors
  • Extraction
  • Frequency
  • Frequency Shift
  • Harmonics
  • Histograms
  • Information Science
  • Intelligibility
  • New York
  • Speech Quality
  • Validation

Readers

  • Speech Processing/Speech Recognition.
  • Systems Analysis and Design