Abstract-In this paper, the issue of audio source separation from a single channel is addressed, i.e. the estimation of several source signals from a single observation of their mixture. This challenging problem is tackled with a specific two levels coderdecoder configuration. At the coder, source signals are assumed to be available before the mix is processed. Each source signal is characterized by a set of parameters that provide additional information useful for separation. We propose an original method using a watermarking technique to imperceptibly embed this information about the source signals into the mix signal. At the decoder, the watermark is extracted from the mix signal to enable an end-user who has no access to the original sources to separate these signals from their mixture. Hence, we call this separation Index Terms-under-determined source separation, watermarking, audio processing, speech processing.
In this paper, we address the issue of underdetermined source separation of non-stationary audio sources from a stereo (i.e. 2-channel) linear instantaneous mixture. This problem is addressed with a specific coder-decoder configuration. At the coder, source signals are assumed to be available before the mixing is processed. A timefrequency (TF) analysis of each source enables to select the one or two predominant sources (among I>2) in each TF region, and a corresponding source(s) index code is imperceptibly embedded into the mix signals using a watermarking technique. At the decoder level, where the original sources signals are unknown, the extraction of the watermark enables to locally reduce the underdetermined configuration to an (over)determined configuration. Sources signals can then be estimated using a classical (over)determined separation technique. Thereby several instruments or voice signals can be separated from stereo mixtures, enabling separate manipulation of the source signals during restitution (i.e. remastering).
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