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Human emotions are inherently ambiguous and impure. When designing systems to anticipate human emotions based on speech, the lack of emotional purity must be considered. However, most of the current methods for speech emotion classification rest on the consensus, e.g., one single hard label for an utterance. This labeling principle imposes challenges for system performance considering emotional impurity. In this paper, we recommend the use of emotional profiles (EPs), which provides a time series of segment-level soft labels to capture the subtle blends of emotional cues present across a specific speech utterance. We further propose the emotion profile refinery (EPR), an iterative procedure to update EPs. The EPR method produces soft, dynamically-generated, multiple probabilistic class labels during successive stages of refinement, which results in significant improvements in the model accuracy. Experiments on three well-known emotion corpora show noticeable gain using the proposed method.
Human emotional speech is, by its very nature, a variant signal. This results in dynamics intrinsic to automatic emotion classification based on speech. In this work, we explore a spectral decomposition method stemming from fluid-dynamics, known as D
Emotional state of a speaker is found to have significant effect in speech production, which can deviate speech from that arising from neutral state. This makes identifying speakers with different emotions a challenging task as generally the speaker
Categorical speech emotion recognition is typically performed as a sequence-to-label problem, i.e., to determine the discrete emotion label of the input utterance as a whole. One of the main challenges in practice is that most of the existing emotion
Despite the widespread utilization of deep neural networks (DNNs) for speech emotion recognition (SER), they are severely restricted due to the paucity of labeled data for training. Recently, segment-based approaches for SER have been evolving, which
This paper introduces scattering transform for speech emotion recognition (SER). Scattering transform generates feature representations which remain stable to deformations and shifting in time and frequency without much loss of information. In speech