In a 2017 New South Wales case, a forensic practitioner conducted a forensic voice comparison using a Gaussian mixture model – universal background model (GMM-UBM). The practitioner did not report the results of empirical tests of the performance of this system under conditions reflecting those of the case under investigation. The practitioner trained the model for the numerator of the likelihood ratio using the known-speaker recording, but trained the model for the denominator of the likelihood ratio (the UBM) using high-quality audio recordings, not recordings which reflected the conditions of the known-speaker recording. There was therefore a difference in the mismatch between the numerator model and the questioned-speaker recording vers...
Since the 1960s, there have been calls for forensic voice comparison to be empirically validated und...
Semi-automatic systems based on traditional linguistic-phonetic features are increasingly being used...
This chapter provides a brief introduction to forensic voice comparison. It describes different appr...
In a 2017 New South Wales case, a forensic practitioner conducted a forensic voice comparison using ...
There is increasing pressure for forensic science to evaluate evidence in a logically correct manner...
This chapter describes a number of signal-processing and statistical-modeling techniques that are co...
In a 2012 case in New South Wales, Australia, the identity of a speaker on several audio recordings ...
In forensic settings, lay (non‐expert) listeners may be required to compare voice samples for identi...
In “Speaker identification in courtroom contexts – Part I” individual listeners made speaker-identif...
Expert testimony is only admissible in common law if it will potentially assist the trier of fact to...
Since the 1960s, there have been calls for forensic voice comparison to be empirically validated und...
Semi-automatic systems based on traditional linguistic-phonetic features are increasingly being used...
This chapter provides a brief introduction to forensic voice comparison. It describes different appr...
In a 2017 New South Wales case, a forensic practitioner conducted a forensic voice comparison using ...
There is increasing pressure for forensic science to evaluate evidence in a logically correct manner...
This chapter describes a number of signal-processing and statistical-modeling techniques that are co...
In a 2012 case in New South Wales, Australia, the identity of a speaker on several audio recordings ...
In forensic settings, lay (non‐expert) listeners may be required to compare voice samples for identi...
In “Speaker identification in courtroom contexts – Part I” individual listeners made speaker-identif...
Expert testimony is only admissible in common law if it will potentially assist the trier of fact to...
Since the 1960s, there have been calls for forensic voice comparison to be empirically validated und...
Semi-automatic systems based on traditional linguistic-phonetic features are increasingly being used...
This chapter provides a brief introduction to forensic voice comparison. It describes different appr...