Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4973701 | Computer Speech & Language | 2017 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
Inspired by the success of Deep Neural Networks (DNN) in text-independent speaker recognition, we have recently demonstrated that similar ideas can also be applied to the text-dependent speaker verification task. In this paper, we describe new advances with our state-of-the-art i-vector based approach to text-dependent speaker verification, which also makes use of different DNN techniques. In order to collect sufficient statistics for i-vector extraction, different frame alignment models are compared such as GMMs, phonemic HMMs or DNNs trained for senone classification. We also experiment with DNN based bottleneck features and their combinations with standard MFCC features. We experiment with few different DNN configurations and investigate the importance of training DNNs on 16Â kHz speech. The results are reported on RSR2015 dataset, where training material is available for all possible enrollment and test phrases. Additionally, we report results also on more challenging RedDots dataset, where the system is built in truly phrase-independent way.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Computer Science
Signal Processing
Authors
Hossein Zeinali, Hossein Sameti, LukáÅ¡ Burget, Jan “Honza” Äernocký,