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Forensic speaker analysis and identification by computer : a Bayesian approach anchored in the cepstral domain

This thesis advances understanding of the forensic value of the automatic speech parameters by addressing the following question: what is the potentiality of the speech cepstrum as a forensic-acoustic parameter? Despite many advances in automatic speech and speaker recognition, robust and unconstrained progress in technical forensic speaker identification has been partly impeded by our incomplete understanding of the interaction and relation between forensic phonetics and the techniques employed in state-of-the-art automatic speech and speaker recognition. The posed question underlies the recurrent and longstanding issue of acoustic parameterisation in the area of forensic phonetics, where 1) speaker identification often must be carried out under less than optimal conditions, and 2) views differ on the usefulness and trustworthiness of the formant frequency measurements. To this end, a new formulation for the forensic evaluation of speech data was derived which is effectively a spectral likelihood ratio with enhanced sensitivity to the local peaks of the formant structure of the speech spectrum of vowel sounds, while retaining the characteristics of the Bayesian framework. This new hybrid formula was used together with a novel approach, which is founded on a statistically-based matched-pairs technique to account for various levels of variation inherent in speech recordings, thereby providing a spectrally meaningful measure of variations between two speech spectra and hence the true worth of speech samples as forensic evidence. The experimental results are obtained based on a forensically-realistic database of a relatively large population of 297 native speakers of Japanese. In sum, the research conducted in this thesis is a major step forward in advancing the forensic-phonetic field which broadens the objective basis of the forensic speaker identification. Beyond advancing knowledge in the field, the semi data-independent nature of the new formula ultimately has great implications in technical forensic speaker identification. It also provides us with a valuable biometric tool with both academic and commercial potential in crime investigation in a field which is already suffering from the lack of adequate data.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/240803
Date January 2007
CreatorsKhodai-Joopari, Mehrdad, Information Technology & Electrical Engineering, Australian Defence Force Academy, UNSW
PublisherAwarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
RightsCopyright Mehrdad Khodai-Joopari, http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/copyright

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