MLLR transforms of self-organized units as features in speaker recognition

2012 
Using speaker adaptation parameters, such as maximum likelihood linear regression (MLLR) adaptation matrices, as features for speaker recognition (SR) has been shown to perform well and can also provide complementary information for fusion with other acoustic-based SR systems, such as GMM-based systems. In order to estimate the adaptation parameters, a speech recognizer in the SR domain is required which in turn requires transcribed training data for recognizer training. This limits the approach only to domains where training transcriptions are available. To generalize the adaptation parameter approach to domains without transcriptions, we propose the use of self-organized unit recognizers that can be trained without supervision (or transcribed data). We report results on the 2002 NIST speaker recognition evaluation (SRE2002) extended data set and show that using MLLR parameters estimated from SOU recognizers give comparable performance to systems using a matched recognizers. SOU recognizers also outperform those using cross-lingual recognizers. When we fused the SOU- and word recognizers, SR equal error rate (EER) can be reduced by another 15%. This suggests SOU recognizers can be useful whether or not transcribed data for recognition training are available.
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