While there are number of guidelines and methods used in practice, there is no standard universally agreed upon system for assessment of pathological voices. Pathological voices are primarily labeled based on the perceptual judgments of specialists, a process that may result in different label(s) being assigned to a given voice sample. This paper focuses on the recognition of five specific pathologies. The main goal is to compare two different classification methods. The first method considers single label classification by assigning a new label (single label) to the ensembles to which they most likely belong. The second method employs all labels originally assigned to the voice samples. Our results show that the pathological voice assessment performance in the second method is improved with respect to the first method.
This paper reports on a method of cadence analysis for the discrimination between human and quadruped using a cheap seismic sensor. Previous works in the domain of seismic detection of human vs. quadruped have relied on the fundamental gait frequency. Slow movement of quadrupeds can generate the same fundamental gait frequency as human footsteps therefore causing the recognizer to be confused when quadruped are ambling around the sensor. Here we propose utilizing the cadence analysis of temporal gait pattern which provides information on temporal distribution of the gait beats. We also propose a robust method of extracting temporal gait patterns. Features extracted from gait patterns are modeled with optimum number of Gaussian Mixture Models (GMMs). The performance of the system during the test for discriminating between horse, dog, multiple people walk, and single human walk/run was over 95%.
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