The necessity of taking correlation between variables into account when estimating strength of forensic speaker recognition evidence is argued for. A modest forensic speaker discrimination experiment is described which investigates how well non-contemporaneous speech samples from the same speaker can be discriminated from different-speaker samples using bivariate kernel density likelihood ratios from F2 and F3 of the five monophthongal phonemes of General Australian English, spoken by 11 males. The experiment shows that an approach which takes the correlation of variables into account can yield useful strengths of evidence. It is also pointed out that the results of such tests still require evaluation with the appropriate confidence limits
This study investigates the use of long-term formant distributions (LTFDs) as a discriminant in fore...
International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in co...
Non-contemporaneous speech samples from 27 male speakers of Australian English were compared in a fo...
The consequences of ignoring correlations between features in traditional forensic speaker recogniti...
A forensic-phonetic speaker identification experiment is described which tests to what extent same-s...
Across forensic speech science, the likelihood ratio (LR) is increasingly becoming accepted as the l...
Important aspects of Technical Forensic Speaker Recognition, particularly those associated with evid...
A likelihood-ratio-based forensic speaker discrimination was conducted using the mean formant freque...
A pilot forensic-phonetic experiment is described which compares the performance of formant- and cep...
An experiment is described relating to estimation of strength of evidence in likelihood ratio-based ...
Despite its many prima facie attractive properties for forensic speaker recognition, F0 is regarded ...
In this contribution, the Bayesian framework for interpretation of evidence when applied to forensic...
Two procedures for the calculation of forensic likelihood ratios were tested on the same set of acou...
This paper describes an experiment investigating how well same-speaker speech samples can be discrim...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
This study investigates the use of long-term formant distributions (LTFDs) as a discriminant in fore...
International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in co...
Non-contemporaneous speech samples from 27 male speakers of Australian English were compared in a fo...
The consequences of ignoring correlations between features in traditional forensic speaker recogniti...
A forensic-phonetic speaker identification experiment is described which tests to what extent same-s...
Across forensic speech science, the likelihood ratio (LR) is increasingly becoming accepted as the l...
Important aspects of Technical Forensic Speaker Recognition, particularly those associated with evid...
A likelihood-ratio-based forensic speaker discrimination was conducted using the mean formant freque...
A pilot forensic-phonetic experiment is described which compares the performance of formant- and cep...
An experiment is described relating to estimation of strength of evidence in likelihood ratio-based ...
Despite its many prima facie attractive properties for forensic speaker recognition, F0 is regarded ...
In this contribution, the Bayesian framework for interpretation of evidence when applied to forensic...
Two procedures for the calculation of forensic likelihood ratios were tested on the same set of acou...
This paper describes an experiment investigating how well same-speaker speech samples can be discrim...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
This study investigates the use of long-term formant distributions (LTFDs) as a discriminant in fore...
International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in co...
Non-contemporaneous speech samples from 27 male speakers of Australian English were compared in a fo...