Download Vocal Tract Area Estimation by Gradient Descent
Articulatory features can provide interpretable and flexible controls for the synthesis of human vocalizations by allowing the user to directly modify parameters like vocal strain or lip position. To make this manipulation through resynthesis possible, we need to estimate the features that result in a desired vocalization directly from audio recordings. In this work, we propose a white-box optimization technique for estimating glottal source parameters and vocal tract shapes from audio recordings of human vowels. The approach is based on inverse filtering and optimizing the frequency response of a waveguide model of the vocal tract with gradient descent, propagating error gradients through the mapping of articulatory features to the vocal tract area function. We apply this method to the task of matching the sound of the Pink Trombone, an interactive articulatory synthesizer, to a given vocalization. We find that our method accurately recovers control functions for audio generated by the Pink Trombone itself. We then compare our technique against evolutionary optimization algorithms and a neural network trained to predict control parameters from audio. A subjective evaluation finds that our approach outperforms these black-box optimization baselines on the task of reproducing human vocalizations.
Download Optimization techniques for a physical model of human vocalisation
We present a non-supervised approach to optimize and evaluate the synthesis of non-speech audio effects from a speech production model. We use the Pink Trombone synthesizer as a case study of a simplified production model of the vocal tract to target nonspeech human audio signals –yawnings. We selected and optimized the control parameters of the synthesizer to minimize the difference between real and generated audio. We validated the most common optimization techniques reported in the literature and a specifically designed neural network. We evaluated several popular quality metrics as error functions. These include both objective quality metrics and subjective-equivalent metrics. We compared the results in terms of total error and computational demand. Results show that genetic and swarm optimizers outperform least squares algorithms at the cost of executing slower and that specific combinations of optimizers and audio representations offer significantly different results. The proposed methodology could be used in benchmarking other physical models and audio types.