Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
566082 Speech Communication 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Blind source separation (BSS) method is one of the newest multisensorial methods that exploits statistical properties of simultaneously recorded independent signals to separate them out. The objective of this method is similar to that of beamforming, namely a set of spatial filters that separate source signals are calculated. Thus, it seems to be reasonable to investigate the spatial efficiency of BSS that is reported in this study. A dummy head with two microphones was used to record two signals in an anechoic chamber: target speech and babble noise in different spatial configurations. Then the speech reception thresholds (SRTs, i.e. signal-to-noise ratio, SNR yielding 50% speech intelligibility) before and after BSS algorithm (Parra and Spence, 2000) were determined for audiologically normal subjects. A significant speech intelligibility improvement was noticed after the BSS was applied. This happened in most cases when the target and masker sources were spatially separated. Moreover, the comparison of objective (SNR enhancement) and subjective (intelligibility improvement) assessment methods is reported here. It must be emphasized that these measures give different results.

Research highlights► Different angular target-masker configurations. ► Speech masked by babble noise and recorded by dummy head. ► Subjective vs. objective measure for evaluation of speech enhancement algorithm. ► Subjective and objective measure give different values. ► High spatial efficiency of BSS was proven in both measures.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Signal Processing
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