The suitability of vowel cepstral spectra for forensic voice comparison is explored within a likelihood ratio-based framework. Noncontemporaneous landline telephone recordings of 297 male Japanese speakers are compared using only two replicates each of their five vowels. 14 cepstrally-mean-subtracted LPC CCs from dc to 5 kHz are used as features. Multivariate likelihood ratios estimated for the 297 target- and 43956 nontarget trials give good results: an equal error rate of 0.28% and log likelihood ratio cost of 0.013. It is concluded that the approach has some merit
This study is the first likelihood ratio (LR)-based forensic voice comparison (FVC) study focusing o...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
The Mel frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs) have long been used for both speech and speaker reco...
The suitability of voiceless fricative spectra for forensic voice comparison is explored within a Li...
This study is a pilot research that explores the effectiveness of a likelihood ratio (LR)-based fore...
This study presents the latter part of an exploratory study of the potential of sub-band parametric ...
An acoustic-phonetic forensic-voice-comparison system was constructed using the time-averaged forman...
Non-contemporaneous speech samples from 27 male speakers of Australian English were compared in a fo...
This thesis advances understanding of the forensic value of the automatic speech parameters by addre...
A forensic-phonetic speaker identification experiment is described which tests to what extent same-s...
An experiment is described relating to estimation of strength of evidence in likelihood ratio-based ...
This study is an investigation into the effect of sample size on a likelihood ratio (LR) based foren...
The paper presents a preliminary investigation of the performance of acoustic-phonetic based forensi...
This study is an investigation into the effect of within-speaker sample size (token number) on a lik...
Earlier studies have indicated that information regarding speaker identity can be extracted from the...
This study is the first likelihood ratio (LR)-based forensic voice comparison (FVC) study focusing o...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
The Mel frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs) have long been used for both speech and speaker reco...
The suitability of voiceless fricative spectra for forensic voice comparison is explored within a Li...
This study is a pilot research that explores the effectiveness of a likelihood ratio (LR)-based fore...
This study presents the latter part of an exploratory study of the potential of sub-band parametric ...
An acoustic-phonetic forensic-voice-comparison system was constructed using the time-averaged forman...
Non-contemporaneous speech samples from 27 male speakers of Australian English were compared in a fo...
This thesis advances understanding of the forensic value of the automatic speech parameters by addre...
A forensic-phonetic speaker identification experiment is described which tests to what extent same-s...
An experiment is described relating to estimation of strength of evidence in likelihood ratio-based ...
This study is an investigation into the effect of sample size on a likelihood ratio (LR) based foren...
The paper presents a preliminary investigation of the performance of acoustic-phonetic based forensi...
This study is an investigation into the effect of within-speaker sample size (token number) on a lik...
Earlier studies have indicated that information regarding speaker identity can be extracted from the...
This study is the first likelihood ratio (LR)-based forensic voice comparison (FVC) study focusing o...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
The Mel frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs) have long been used for both speech and speaker reco...