ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
In a recent acoustic scene classification (ASC) research field, training and test device channel mismatch have become an issue for the real world implementation. To address the issue, this paper proposes a channel domain conversion using factorized hierarchical variational autoencoder. Proposed method adapts both the source and target domain to a pre-defined specific domain. Unlike the conventional approach, the relationship between the target and source domain and information of each domain are not required in the adaptation process. Based on the experimental results using the IEEE detection and classification of acoustic scenes and event 2018 task 1-B dataset and the baseline system, it is shown that the proposed approach can mitigate the channel mismatching issue of different recording devices.
This thesis focuses on dealing with the task of acoustic scene classification (ASC), and then applied the techniques developed for ASC to a real-life application of detecting respiratory disease. To deal with ASC challenges, this thesis addresses thr
Acoustic Scene Classification (ASC) aims to classify the environment in which the audio signals are recorded. Recently, Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) have been successfully applied to ASC. However, the data distributions of the audio signals r
The performance of an Acoustic Scene Classification (ASC) system is highly depending on the latent temporal dynamics of the audio signal. In this paper, we proposed a multiple layers temporal pooling method using CNN feature sequence as in-put, which
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) with log-mel spectrum features have shown promising results for acoustic scene classification tasks. However, the performance of these CNN based classifiers is still lacking as they do not generalise well for unkn
Acoustic scene recordings are represented by different types of handcrafted or Neural Network-derived features. These features, typically of thousands of dimensions, are classified in state of the art approaches using kernel machines, such as the Sup