Abstrakt: |
The effectiveness of a set of speaker recognition features is usually characterized in terms of the ratio of the interspeaker variability of the feature to its intraspeaker variability (F-ratio). A recent experiment in speech synthesis [M.R. Sambur, 'An Efficient LPC Vocoder,' Bell Syst. Tech. J. (to be published)] has shown that by an appropriate eigenvector analysis, a set of orthogonal parameters can be obtained that is essentially constant across an utterance for a given speaker (i.e., zero intraspeaker variability). If the same eigenvector analysis is applied to the same utterance spoken by another speaker, the resulting values of the orthogonal parameters are, however, different. These orthogonal parameters were therefore examined for their ability to differentiate different speakers. They were formally tested in a speaker recognition experiment involving 21 speakers. The speech data consisted of six repetitions of the same sentence spoken by each speaker on six separate occasions. The identification and verification accuracy of the orthogonal parameters exceeded 99%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |