A new method for robust estimation of fundamental frequency (F0) from speech signal is proposed in this paper. The method exploits the high SNR regions of speech in time and frequency domains in the outputs of single frequency filtering (SFF) of speech signal. The high resolution in the frequency domain brings out the harmonic characteristics of speech clearly. The harmonic spacing in the high SNR regions of spectrum determine the F0. The concept of root cepstrum is used to reduce the effects of vocal tract resonances in the F0 estimation. The proposed method is evaluated for clean speech and noisy speech simulated for 15 different degradations at different noise levels. Performance of the proposed method is compared with four other standard methods of F0 extraction. From the results it is evident that the proposed method is robust for most types of degradations.
Impulse-like characteristics of excitation occur at the glottal closure instant (GCI) due to sharp closure of the vibrating vocal folds in each glottal cycle. The GCIs are detected from the excitation component of the speech signal, and the excitation component is derived using inverse filtering or its variants. In this paper we propose a method for GCI detection based on single frequency filtering (SFF) of the speech signal. The SFF output has high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) property in speech regions. The variance (across frequency) contour computed from the SFF output show rapid changes around the GCIs, and these rapid changes can be observed even when the speech signal is degraded. Thus the GCI locations can be extracted even from degraded speech using the SFF analysis. The robustness of the method is demonstrated for several cases of degradation of speech signal.
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