International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in court. Generally, a forensic expert is asked to analyze both suspect and criminal's voice samples in order to indicate whether the evidence supports the prosecution (same-speaker) or defence (different-speakers) hypotheses. This process is known as Forensic Voice Comparison (FVC). Since the emergence of the DNA typing model, the likelihood-ratio (LR) framework has become the golden standard in forensic sciences. The LR not only supports one of the hypotheses but also quantifies the strength of its support. However, the LR accepts some practical limitations due to its estimation process itself. It is particularly true when Automatic Speaker Reco...
Forensic phoneticians have found speech tempo to be an important parameter for forensic speaker comp...
This chapter describes a number of signal-processing and statistical-modeling techniques that are co...
Fundamental frequency (f0) is a highly speaker-specific feature. Consequently, practitioners often u...
International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in co...
International audienceForensic Voice Comparison (FVC) is increasingly using the likelihood ratio (LR...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
In the past years, there is increasing awareness and acceptance among forensic speech scientists of ...
Defining the relevant population to sample is an important issue in data-based implementation of the...
There is increasing pressure for forensic science to evaluate evidence in a logically correct manner...
This article investigates to what extent and in what ways the size of the background population affe...
Situated at the intersection of forensic speech science and bilingualism, this thesis focuses on the...
Across forensic speech science, the likelihood ratio (LR) is increasingly becoming accepted as the l...
This study is an investigation into the effect of sample size on a likelihood ratio (LR) based foren...
This thesis examines the influence of acoustic variability on automatic speaker recognition systems ...
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Forensic voice discrimination by la...
Forensic phoneticians have found speech tempo to be an important parameter for forensic speaker comp...
This chapter describes a number of signal-processing and statistical-modeling techniques that are co...
Fundamental frequency (f0) is a highly speaker-specific feature. Consequently, practitioners often u...
International audienceIt is common to see voice recordings being presented as a forensic trace in co...
International audienceForensic Voice Comparison (FVC) is increasingly using the likelihood ratio (LR...
This study sets out to investigate how the speech of a single speaker can vary depending on their in...
In the past years, there is increasing awareness and acceptance among forensic speech scientists of ...
Defining the relevant population to sample is an important issue in data-based implementation of the...
There is increasing pressure for forensic science to evaluate evidence in a logically correct manner...
This article investigates to what extent and in what ways the size of the background population affe...
Situated at the intersection of forensic speech science and bilingualism, this thesis focuses on the...
Across forensic speech science, the likelihood ratio (LR) is increasingly becoming accepted as the l...
This study is an investigation into the effect of sample size on a likelihood ratio (LR) based foren...
This thesis examines the influence of acoustic variability on automatic speaker recognition systems ...
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Forensic voice discrimination by la...
Forensic phoneticians have found speech tempo to be an important parameter for forensic speaker comp...
This chapter describes a number of signal-processing and statistical-modeling techniques that are co...
Fundamental frequency (f0) is a highly speaker-specific feature. Consequently, practitioners often u...