Blind Source Separation: Fundamentals and Recent Advances (A Tutorial Overview Presented at SBrT-2001)
A number of people are found in a room and involved in loud conversations in groups, just as it would happen in a cocktail party. There might also be some background noise, which could be music, car noise from outside, etc. Each person in this room is therefore forced to listen to a mixture of speech sounds coming from various directions, along with some noise. These sounds may come directly to one's ear or have first suffered a sequence of reverberations because of their reflections on the room's walls. The problem of focusing one's listening attention on a particular speaker among this cacophony of conversations and noise has been known as the cocktail party problem [6]. It consists of separating a mixture of speech signals of different characteristics with noise added to it. The signals are a-priori unknown (one listens only to a combination of them) as is also the way they have been mixed. The above scenario is a good analog for many other examples of situations that demand for a separation of mixed signals with no presupposed knowledge on the signals and the system mixing them.
Mar-9-2016
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