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Towards More Efficient DNN-Based Speech Enhancement Using Quantized Correlation Mask

IEEE Access | Abdullah S, Zamani M, Demosthenous A | Many studies on deep learning-based speech enhancement (SE) utilizing the computational auditory scene analysis method typically employs the ide...

3 February 2021

Towards More Efficient DNN-Based Speech Enhancement Using Quantized Correlation Mask

Abstract

Many studies on deep learning-based speech enhancement (SE) utilizing the computational auditory scene analysis method typically employs the ideal binary mask or the ideal ratio mask to reconstruct the enhanced speech signal. However, many SE applications in real scenarios demand a desirable balance between denoising capability and computational cost. In this study, first, an improvement over the ideal ratio mask to attain more superior SE performance is proposed through introducing an efficient adaptive correlation-based factor for adjusting the ratio mask. The proposed method exploits the correlation coefficients among the noisy speech, noise and clean speech to effectively re-distribute the power ratio of the speech and noise during the ratio mask construction phase. Second, to make the supervised SE system more computationally-efficient, quantization techniques are considered to reduce the number of bits needed to represent floating numbers, leading to a more compact SE model. The proposed quantized correlation mask is utilized in conjunction with a 4-layer deep neural network (DNN-QCM) comprising dropout regulation, pre-training and noise-aware training to derive a robust and high-order mapping in enhancement, and to improve generalization capability in unseen conditions. Results show that the quantized correlation mask outperforms the conventional ratio mask representation and the other SE algorithms used for comparison. When compared to a DNN with ideal ratio mask as its learning targets, the DNN-QCM provided an improvement of approximately 6.5% in the short-time objective intelligibility score and 11.0% in the perceptual evaluation of speech quality score. The introduction of the quantization method can reduce the neural network weights to a 5-bit representation from a 32-bit, while effectively suppressing stationary and non-stationary noise. Timing analyses also show that with the techniques incorporated in the proposed DNN-QCM system to increase its compactness, the training and inference time can be reduced by 15.7% and 10.5%, respectively.

Publication Type:Journal article
Publication Sub Type:Article
Authors:Abdullah S, Zamani M, Demosthenous A
Publisher:Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Publication date:03//02/2021
Pagination:24350 - 24362
Journal:IEEE Access
Volume:9
Status:Published
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/access.2021.3056711
Full Text URL:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10121574/

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