ISCA Archive Interspeech 2018
ISCA Archive Interspeech 2018

Talker Diarization in the Wild: the Case of Child-centered Daylong Audio-recordings

Alejandrina Cristia, Shobhana Ganesh, Marisa Casillas, Sriram Ganapathy

Speaker diarization (answering “who spoke when”) is a widely researched subject within speech technology. Numerous experiments have been run on datasets built from broadcast news, meeting data and call centers - the task sometimes appears close to being solved. Much less work has begun to tackle the hardest diarization task of all: spontaneous conversations in real-world settings. Such diarization would be particularly useful for studies of language acquisition, where researchers investigate the speech children produce and hear in their daily lives. In this paper, we study audio gathered with a recorder worn by small children as they went about their normal days. As a result, each child was exposed to different acoustic environments with a multitude of background noises and a varying number of adults and peers. The inconsistency of speech and noise within and across samples poses a challenging task for speaker diarization systems, which we tackled via retraining and data augmentation techniques. We further studied sources of structured variation across raw audio files, including the impact of speaker type distribution, proportion of speech from children and child age on diarization performance. We discuss the extent to which these findings might generalize to other samples of speech in the wild.


doi: 10.21437/Interspeech.2018-2078

Cite as: Cristia, A., Ganesh, S., Casillas, M., Ganapathy, S. (2018) Talker Diarization in the Wild: the Case of Child-centered Daylong Audio-recordings. Proc. Interspeech 2018, 2583-2587, doi: 10.21437/Interspeech.2018-2078

@inproceedings{cristia18_interspeech,
  author={Alejandrina Cristia and Shobhana Ganesh and Marisa Casillas and Sriram Ganapathy},
  title={{Talker Diarization in the Wild: the Case of Child-centered Daylong Audio-recordings}},
  year=2018,
  booktitle={Proc. Interspeech 2018},
  pages={2583--2587},
  doi={10.21437/Interspeech.2018-2078}
}