acoustic condition
Treble10: A high-quality dataset for far-field speech recognition, dereverberation, and enhancement
Mullins, Sarabeth S., Götz, Georg, Bezzam, Eric, Zheng, Steven, Nielsen, Daniel Gert
Accurate far-field speech datasets are critical for tasks such as automatic speech recognition (ASR), dereverberation, speech enhancement, and source separation. However, current datasets are limited by the trade-off between acoustic realism and scalability. Measured corpora provide faithful physics but are expensive, low-coverage, and rarely include paired clean and reverberant data. In contrast, most simulation-based datasets rely on simplified geometrical acoustics, thus failing to reproduce key physical phenomena like diffraction, scattering, and interference that govern sound propagation in complex environments. We introduce Treble10, a large-scale, physically accurate room-acoustic dataset. Treble10 contains over 3000 broadband room impulse responses (RIRs) simulated in 10 fully furnished real-world rooms, using a hybrid simulation paradigm implemented in the Treble SDK that combines a wave-based and geometrical acoustics solver. The dataset provides six complementary subsets, spanning mono, 8th-order Ambisonics, and 6-channel device RIRs, as well as pre-convolved reverberant speech scenes paired with LibriSpeech utterances. All signals are simulated at 32 kHz, accurately modelling low-frequency wave effects and high-frequency reflections. Treble10 bridges the realism gap between measurement and simulation, enabling reproducible, physically grounded evaluation and large-scale data augmentation for far-field speech tasks. The dataset is openly available via the Hugging Face Hub, and is intended as both a benchmark and a template for next-generation simulation-driven audio research.
PianoVAM: A Multimodal Piano Performance Dataset
Kim, Yonghyun, Park, Junhyung, Bae, Joonhyung, Kim, Kirak, Kwon, Taegyun, Lerch, Alexander, Nam, Juhan
The multimodal nature of music performance has driven increasing interest in data beyond the audio domain within the music information retrieval (MIR) community. This paper introduces PianoVAM, a comprehensive piano performance dataset that includes videos, audio, MIDI, hand landmarks, fingering labels, and rich metadata. The dataset was recorded using a Disklavier piano, capturing audio and MIDI from amateur pianists during their daily practice sessions, alongside synchronized top-view videos in realistic and varied performance conditions. Hand landmarks and fingering labels were extracted using a pretrained hand pose estimation model and a semi-automated fingering annotation algorithm. We discuss the challenges encountered during data collection and the alignment process across different modalities. Additionally, we describe our fingering annotation method based on hand landmarks extracted from videos. Finally, we present benchmarking results for both audio-only and audio-visual piano transcription using the PianoVAM dataset and discuss additional potential applications.
Loquacious Set: 25,000 Hours of Transcribed and Diverse English Speech Recognition Data for Research and Commercial Use
Parcollet, Titouan, Tseng, Yuan, Zhang, Shucong, van Dalen, Rogier
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) research is driven by the availability of common datasets between industrial researchers and academics, encouraging comparisons and evaluations. Lib-riSpeech, despite its long success as an ASR benchmark, is now limited by its size and focus on clean, read speech, leading to near-zero word error rates. More recent datasets, including MOSEL, YODAS, Gigaspeech, OWSM, Libriheavy or People's Speech suffer from major limitations including licenses that researchers in the industry cannot use, unreliable transcriptions, incorrect audio data, or the lack of evaluation sets. This work presents the Loquacious Set, a 25,000-hour curated collection of commercially usable English speech. Featuring hundreds of thousands of speakers with diverse accents and a wide range of speech types (read, spontaneous, talks, clean, noisy), the Loquacious Set is designed to work for academics and researchers in the industry to build ASR systems in real-world scenarios.
Speaker Retrieval in the Wild: Challenges, Effectiveness and Robustness
Loweimi, Erfan, Qian, Mengjie, Knill, Kate, Gales, Mark
There is a growing abundance of publicly available or company-owned audio/video archives, highlighting the increasing importance of efficient access to desired content and information retrieval from these archives. This paper investigates the challenges, solutions, effectiveness, and robustness of speaker retrieval systems developed "in the wild" which involves addressing two primary challenges: extraction of task-relevant labels from limited metadata for system development and evaluation, as well as the unconstrained acoustic conditions encountered in the archive, ranging from quiet studios to adverse noisy environments. While we focus on the publicly-available BBC Rewind archive (spanning 1948 to 1979), our framework addresses the broader issue of speaker retrieval on extensive and possibly aged archives with no control over the content and acoustic conditions. Typically, these archives offer a brief and general file description, mostly inadequate for specific applications like speaker retrieval, and manual annotation of such large-scale archives is unfeasible. We explore various aspects of system development (e.g., speaker diarisation, embedding extraction, query selection) and analyse the challenges, possible solutions, and their functionality. To evaluate the performance, we conduct systematic experiments in both clean setup and against various distortions simulating real-world applications. Our findings demonstrate the effectiveness and robustness of the developed speaker retrieval systems, establishing the versatility and scalability of the proposed framework for a wide range of applications beyond the BBC Rewind corpus.
Multi-Microphone and Multi-Modal Emotion Recognition in Reverberant Environment
Cohen, Ohad, Hazan, Gershon, Gannot, Sharon
This paper presents a Multi-modal Emotion Recognition (MER) system designed to enhance emotion recognition accuracy in challenging acoustic conditions. Our approach combines a modified and extended Hierarchical Token-semantic Audio Transformer (HTS-AT) for multi-channel audio processing with an R(2+1)D Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) model for video analysis. We evaluate our proposed method on a reverberated version of the Ryerson audio-visual database of emotional speech and song (RAVDESS) dataset using synthetic and real-world Room Impulse Responsess (RIRs). Our results demonstrate that integrating audio and video modalities yields superior performance compared to uni-modal approaches, especially in challenging acoustic conditions. Moreover, we show that the multimodal (audiovisual) approach that utilizes multiple microphones outperforms its single-microphone counterpart.
The Unreliability of Acoustic Systems in Alzheimer's Speech Datasets with Heterogeneous Recording Conditions
Gauder, Lara, Riera, Pablo, Slachevsky, Andrea, Forno, Gonzalo, Garcia, Adolfo M., Ferrer, Luciana
Automated speech analysis is a thriving approach to detect early markers of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Yet, recording conditions in most AD datasets are heterogeneous, with patients and controls often evaluated in different acoustic settings. While this is not a problem for analyses based on speech transcription or features obtained from manual alignment, it does cast serious doubts on the validity of acoustic features, which are strongly influenced by acquisition conditions. We examined this issue in the ADreSSo dataset, derived from the widely used Pitt corpus. We show that systems based on two acoustic features, MFCCs and Wav2vec 2.0 embeddings, can discriminate AD patients from controls with above-chance performance when using only the non-speech part of the audio signals. We replicated this finding in a separate dataset of Spanish speakers. Thus, in these datasets, the class can be partly predicted by recording conditions. Our results are a warning against the use of acoustic systems for identifying patients based on non-standardized recordings. We propose that acoustically heterogeneous datasets for dementia studies should be either (a) analyzed using only transcripts or other features derived from manual annotations, or (b) replaced by datasets collected with strictly controlled acoustic conditions.
BUDDy: Single-Channel Blind Unsupervised Dereverberation with Diffusion Models
Moliner, Eloi, Lemercier, Jean-Marie, Welker, Simon, Gerkmann, Timo, Välimäki, Vesa
Generative models represent another category of dereverberation algorithms aiming to learn the distribution In this paper, we present an unsupervised single-channel method for of anechoic speech conditioned on reverberant input. Some joint blind dereverberation and room impulse response estimation, blind supervised methods using generative models such as diffusion based on posterior sampling with diffusion models. We parameterize models [12, 13] have been recently proposed [14, 15]. However, supervised the reverberation operator using a filter with exponential decay approaches struggle with limited generalization to diverse for each frequency subband, and iteratively estimate the corresponding acoustic conditions due to the scarcity and variability of available parameters as the speech utterance gets refined along the reverse RIR data. Unsupervised approaches offer the potential to circumvent diffusion trajectory. A measurement consistency criterion enforces such limitations as they do not require paired anechoic/reverberant the fidelity of the generated speech with the reverberant measurement, data. This paper builds upon prior work [16], which proposed an while an unconditional diffusion model implements a strong unsupervised method for informed single-channel dereverberation prior for clean speech generation. Without any knowledge of the based on diffusion posterior sampling. The previous study showed room impulse response nor any coupled reverberant-anechoic data, the potential of leveraging diffusion models as a strong clean speech we can successfully perform dereverberation in various acoustic scenarios.
Diffusion-Based Speech Enhancement in Matched and Mismatched Conditions Using a Heun-Based Sampler
Gonzalez, Philippe, Tan, Zheng-Hua, Østergaard, Jan, Jensen, Jesper, Alstrøm, Tommy Sonne, May, Tobias
Diffusion models are a new class of generative models that have recently been applied to speech enhancement successfully. Previous works have demonstrated their superior performance in mismatched conditions compared to state-of-the art discriminative models. However, this was investigated with a single database for training and another one for testing, which makes the results highly dependent on the particular databases. Moreover, recent developments from the image generation literature remain largely unexplored for speech enhancement. These include several design aspects of diffusion models, such as the noise schedule or the reverse sampler. In this work, we systematically assess the generalization performance of a diffusion-based speech enhancement model by using multiple speech, noise and binaural room impulse response (BRIR) databases to simulate mismatched acoustic conditions. We also experiment with a noise schedule and a sampler that have not been applied to speech enhancement before. We show that the proposed system substantially benefits from using multiple databases for training, and achieves superior performance compared to state-of-the-art discriminative models in both matched and mismatched conditions. We also show that a Heun-based sampler achieves superior performance at a smaller computational cost compared to a sampler commonly used for speech enhancement.
Quantifying the perceptual value of lexical and non-lexical channels in speech
Wallbridge, Sarenne, Bell, Peter, Lai, Catherine
Speech is a fundamental means of communication that can be seen to provide two channels for transmitting information: the lexical channel of which words are said, and the non-lexical channel of how they are spoken. Both channels shape listener expectations of upcoming communication; however, directly quantifying their relative effect on expectations is challenging. Previous attempts require spoken variations of lexically-equivalent dialogue turns or conspicuous acoustic manipulations. This paper introduces a generalised paradigm to study the value of non-lexical information in dialogue across unconstrained lexical content. By quantifying the perceptual value of the non-lexical channel with both accuracy and entropy reduction, we show that non-lexical information produces a consistent effect on expectations of upcoming dialogue: even when it leads to poorer discriminative turn judgements than lexical content alone, it yields higher consensus among participants.
TranSpeech: Speech-to-Speech Translation With Bilateral Perturbation
Huang, Rongjie, Liu, Jinglin, Liu, Huadai, Ren, Yi, Zhang, Lichao, He, Jinzheng, Zhao, Zhou
Specifically, a sequence of discrete representations derived in a self-supervised manner are predicted from the model and passed to a vocoder for speech reconstruction, while still facing the following challenges: 1) Acoustic multimodality: the discrete units derived from speech with same content could be indeterministic due to the acoustic property (e.g., rhythm, pitch, and energy), which causes deterioration of translation accuracy; 2) high latency: current S2ST systems utilize autoregressive models which predict each unit conditioned on the sequence previously generated, failing to take full advantage of parallelism. In this work, we propose TranSpeech, a speech-to-speech translation model with bilateral perturbation. To alleviate the acoustic multimodal problem, we propose bilateral perturbation (BiP), which consists of the style normalization and information enhancement stages, to learn only the linguistic information from speech samples and generate more deterministic representations. With reduced multimodality, we step forward and become the first to establish a non-autoregressive S2ST technique, which repeatedly masks and predicts unit choices and produces high-accuracy results in just a few cycles. Experimental results on three language pairs demonstrate that BiP yields an improvement of 2.9 BLEU on average compared with a baseline textless S2ST model. Moreover, our parallel decoding shows a significant reduction of inference latency, enabling speedup up to 21.4x than autoregressive technique. Speech-to-speech translation (S2ST) aims at converting speech from one language into speech in another, significantly breaking down communication barriers between people not sharing a common language. Among the conventional method (Lavie et al., 1997; Nakamura et al., 2006; Wahlster, 2013), the cascaded system of automatic speech recognition (ASR), machine translation (MT), or speech-to-text translation (S2T) followed by text-to-speech synthesis (TTS) have demonstrated reasonable results yet suffering from expensive computational costs.