Monday, October 11, 2010

Lab meeting Oct. 11th 2010, (Nicole) Improvement in Listening Capability for Humanoid Robot HRP-2(ICRA 2010)

Title: Improvement in Listening Capability for Humanoid Robot HRP-2 (ICRA2010)

Authors: Toru Takahashi, Kazuhiro Nakadai, Kazunori Komatani, Tetsuya Ogata and Hiroshi G. Okuno.

Abstract:

This paper describes improvement of sound source separation for a simultaneous automatic speech recognition (ASR) system of a humanoid robot. A recognition error in the system is caused by a separation error and interferences of other sources. In separability, an original geometric source separation (GSS) is improved. Our GSS uses a measured robot’s head related transfer function (HRTF) to estimate a separation matrix. As an original GSS uses a simulated HRTF calculated based on a distance between microphone and sound source, there is a large mismatch between the simulated and the measured transfer functions. The mismatch causes a severe degradation of recognition performance.

Faster convergence speed of separation matrix reduces separation error. Our approach gives a nearer initial separation matrix based on a measured transfer function from an optimal separation matrix than a simulated one. As a result, we expect that our GSS improves the convergence speed. Our GSS is also able to handle an adaptive step-size parameter.

These new features are added into open source robot audition software (OSS) called”HARK” which is newly updated as version 1.0.0. The HARK has been installed on a HRP-2 humanoid with an 8-element microphone array. The listening capability of HRP-2 is evaluated by recognizing a target speech signal which is separated from a simultaneous speech signal by three talkers. The word correct rate (WCR) of ASR improves by 5 points under normal acoustic environments and by 10 points under noisy environments. Experimental results show that HARK 1.0.0 improves the robustness against noises.


[link]

No comments: