Many past studies have been conducted on speech/music discrimination due to the potential applications for broadcast and other media; however, it remains possible to expand the experimental scope to include samples of speech with varying amounts of background music. This paper focuses on the development and evaluation of two measures of the ratio between speech energy and music energy: a reference measure called speech-to-music ratio (SMR), which is known objectively only prior to mixing, and a feature called the stereo-input mix-to-peripheral level feature (SIMPL), which is computed from the stereo mixed signal as an imprecise estimate of SMR. SIMPL is an objective signal measure calculated by taking advantage of broadcast mixing techniques in which vocals are typically placed at stereo center, unlike most instruments. Conversely, SMR is a hidden variable defined by the relationship between the powers of portions of audio attributed to speech and music. It is shown that SIMPL is predictive of SMR and can be combined with state-of-the-art features in order to improve performance. For evaluation, this new metric is applied in speech/music (binary) classification, speech/music/mixed (trinary) classification, and a new speech-to-music ratio estimation problem. Promising results are achieved, including 93.06% accuracy for trinary classification and 3.86 dB RMSE for estimation of the SMR.
In recent history, the convention that adopting an ‘upright’ seated posture would decrease lumbar strain has shifted. The idea of dynamically varying seated posture is being considered as optimal for reducing lumbar strain and possibly lower back pain [1–2]. Thus, it would seem vital to design a device that helps alert users of the need to change their seated postures in workplace or study environments.
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