Minimising speaker verification utterance length through confidence based early verification decisions


Autoria(s): Vogt, Robert J.; Sridharan, Sridha
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

This paper presents a novel approach of estimating the confidence interval of speaker verification scores. This approach is utilised to minimise the utterance lengths required in order to produce a confident verification decision. The confidence estimation method is also extended to address both the problem of high correlation in consecutive frame scores, and robustness with very limited training samples. The proposed technique achieves a drastic reduction in the typical data requirements for producing confident decisions in an automatic speaker verification system. When evaluated on the NIST 2005 SRE, the early verification decision method demonstrates that an average of 5–10 seconds of speech is sufficient to produce verification rates approaching those achieved previously using an average in excess of 100 seconds of speech.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29600/

Publicador

Springer

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29600/1/c29600.pdf

DOI:10.1007/978-3-642-01793-3_47

Vogt, Robert J. & Sridharan, Sridha (2009) Minimising speaker verification utterance length through confidence based early verification decisions. In Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Advances in Biometrics, Springer, University of Sassari, Italy, pp. 454-463.

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Springer

This is the author-version of the work. Conference proceedings published, by Springer Verlag, will be available via SpringerLink. http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; Information Security Institute; School of Engineering Systems

Palavras-Chave #080107 Natural Language Processing
Tipo

Conference Paper