Asia
Hybrid NN/HMM-Based Speech Recognition with a Discriminant Neural Feature Extraction
Willett, Daniel, Rigoll, Gerhard
In this paper, we present a novel hybrid architecture for continuous speech recognition systems. It consists of a continuous HMM system extended by an arbitrary neural network that is used as a preprocessor that takes several frames of the feature vector as input to produce more discriminative feature vectors with respect to the underlying HMM system. This hybrid system is an extension of a state-of-the-art continuous HMM system, and in fact, it is the first hybrid system that really is capable of outperforming these standard systems with respect to the recognition accuracy. Experimental results show an relative error reduction of about 10% that we achieved on a remarkably good recognition system based on continuous HMMs for the Resource Management 1 OOO-word continuous speech recognition task.
Blind Separation of Radio Signals in Fading Channels
We apply information maximization / maximum likelihood blind source separation [2, 6) to complex valued signals mixed with complex valued nonstationary matrices. This case arises in radio communications with baseband signals. We incorporate known source signal distributions in the adaptation, thus making the algorithms less "blind". This results in drastic reduction of the amount of data needed for successful convergence. Adaptation to rapidly changing signal mixing conditions, such as to fading in mobile communications, becomes now feasible as demonstrated by simulations. 1 Introduction In SDMA (spatial division multiple access) the purpose is to separate radio signals of interfering users (either intentional or accidental) from each others on the basis of the spatial characteristics of the signals using smart antennas, array processing, and beamforming [5, 8).
Bayesian Robustification for Audio Visual Fusion
Movellan, Javier R., Mineiro, Paul
Department of Cognitive Science Department of Cognitive Science University of California, San Diego University of California, San Diego La Jolla, CA 92092-0515 La Jolla, CA 92092-0515 Abstract We discuss the problem of catastrophic fusion in multimodal recognition systems. This problem arises in systems that need to fuse different channels in non-stationary environments. Practice shows that when recognition modules within each modality are tested in contexts inconsistent with their assumptions, their influence on the fused product tends to increase, with catastrophic results. We explore a principled solution to this problem based upon Bayesian ideas of competitive models and inference robustification: each sensory channel is provided with simple white-noise context models, and the perceptual hypothesis and context are jointly estimated. Consequently, context deviations are interpreted as changes in white noise contamination strength, automatically adjusting the influence of the module.
Analysis of Drifting Dynamics with Neural Network Hidden Markov Models
Kohlmorgen, Jens, Mรผller, Klaus-Robert, Pawelzik, Klaus
We present a method for the analysis of nonstationary time series with multiple operating modes. In particular, it is possible to detect and to model both a switching of the dynamics and a less abrupt, time consuming drift from one mode to another. This is achieved in two steps. First, an unsupervised training method provides prediction experts for the inherent dynamical modes. Then, the trained experts are used in a hidden Markov model that allows to model drifts. An application to physiological wake/sleep data demonstrates that analysis and modeling of real-world time series can be improved when the drift paradigm is taken into account.
An Analog VLSI Neural Network for Phase-based Machine Vision
Shi, Bertram Emil, Hui, Kwok Fai
Gabor filters are used as preprocessing stages for different tasks in machine vision and image processing. Their use has been partially motivated by findings that two dimensional Gabor filters can be used to model receptive fields of orientation selective neurons in the visual cortex (Daugman, 1980) and three dimensional spatiotemporal Gabor filters can be used to model biological image motion analysis (Adelson, 1985). A Gabor filter has a complex valued impulse response which is a complex exponential modulated by a Gaussian function.
A 1, 000-Neuron System with One Million 7-bit Physical Interconnections
An asynchronous PDM (Pulse-Density-Modulating) digital neural network system has been developed in our laboratory. It consists of one thousand neurons that are physically interconnected via one million 7-bit synapses. It can solve one thousand simultaneous nonlinear first-order differential equations in a fully parallel and continuous fashion. The performance of this system was measured by a winner-take-all network with one thousand neurons. Although the magnitude of the input and network parameters were identical for each competing neuron, one of them won in 6 milliseconds.
Mapping a Manifold of Perceptual Observations
Nonlinear dimensionality reduction is formulated here as the problem of trying to find a Euclidean feature-space embedding of a set of observations that preserves as closely as possible their intrinsic metric structure - the distances between points on the observation manifold as measured along geodesic paths. Our isometric feature mapping procedure, or isomap, is able to reliably recover low-dimensional nonlinear structure in realistic perceptual data sets, such as a manifold of face images, where conventional global mapping methods find only local minima. The recovered map provides a canonical set of globally meaningful features, which allows perceptual transformations such as interpolation, extrapolation, and analogy - highly nonlinear transformations in the original observation space - to be computed with simple linear operations in feature space.
Stacked Density Estimation
Smyth, Padhraic, Wolpert, David
One frequently estimates density functions for which there is little prior knowledge on the shape of the density and for which one wants a flexible and robust estimator (allowing multimodality if it exists). In this context, the methods of choice tend to be finite mixture models and kernel density estimation methods. For mixture modeling, mixtures of Gaussian components are frequently assumed and model choice reduces to the problem of choosing the number k of Gaussian components in the model (Titterington, Smith and Makov, 1986). For kernel density estimation, kernel shapes are typically chosen from a selection of simple unimodal densities such as Gaussian, triangular, or Cauchy densities, and kernel bandwidths are selected in a data-driven manner (Silverman 1986; Scott 1994). As argued by Draper (1996), model uncertainty can contribute significantly to pre- - Also with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory 525-3660, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109 Stacked Density Estimation 669 dictive error in estimation. While usually considered in the context of supervised learning, model uncertainty is also important in unsupervised learning applications such as density estimation. Even when the model class under consideration contains the true density, if we are only given a finite data set, then there is always a chance of selecting the wrong model. Moreover, even if the correct model is selected, there will typically be estimation error in the parameters of that model.