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Christoph Boeddeker

Christoph Boeddeker contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

10 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Predictive-Generative Drift Decomposition for Speech Enhancement and Separation

We propose a plug-and-play framework for speech enhancement and separation that augments predictive methods with a generative speech prior. Our approach, termed Stochastic Interpolant Prior for Speech (SIPS), builds on stochastic interpolants and leverages their flexibility to bridge predictive and generative modeling. Specifically, we decompose the interpolation dynamics into a task-specific drift and a stochastic denoising component, allowing a predictive estimate to be integrated directly into the generative sampling process. This results in a mathematically grounded framework for combining strong pretrained predictors with the expressive power of generative models. To this end, we train a score model using only clean speech, yielding a degradation-agnostic prior that can be reused across tasks. During inference, the predictor provides a deterministic drift that steers the sampling process toward a task-consistent estimate, while the score model preserves perceptual naturalness. Unlike prior hybrid approaches, which typically rely on architecture-specific conditioning and are tied to particular predictors or degradation settings, SIPS provides a unified framework that generalizes across predictors and additive degradation tasks. We demonstrate its effectiveness for both speech enhancement and speech separation using recent predictors such as SEMamba and FlexIO. The proposed method consistently improves perceptual quality, achieving gains up +1.0 NISQA for speech separation.

preprint2024arXiv

Geodesic interpolation of frame-wise speaker embeddings for the diarization of meeting scenarios

We propose a modified teacher-student training for the extraction of frame-wise speaker embeddings that allows for an effective diarization of meeting scenarios containing partially overlapping speech. To this end, a geodesic distance loss is used that enforces the embeddings computed from regions with two active speakers to lie on the shortest path on a sphere between the points given by the d-vectors of each of the active speakers. Using those frame-wise speaker embeddings in clustering-based diarization outperforms segment-level clustering-based diarization systems such as VBx and Spectral Clustering. By extending our approach to a mixture-model-based diarization, the performance can be further improved, approaching the diarization error rates of diarization systems that use a dedicated overlap detection, and outperforming these systems when also employing an additional overlap detection.

preprint2022arXiv

An Initialization Scheme for Meeting Separation with Spatial Mixture Models

Spatial mixture model (SMM) supported acoustic beamforming has been extensively used for the separation of simultaneously active speakers. However, it has hardly been considered for the separation of meeting data, that are characterized by long recordings and only partially overlapping speech. In this contribution, we show that the fact that often only a single speaker is active can be utilized for a clever initialization of an SMM that employs time-varying class priors. In experiments on LibriCSS we show that the proposed initialization scheme achieves a significantly lower Word Error Rate (WER) on a downstream speech recognition task than a random initialization of the class probabilities by drawing from a Dirichlet distribution. With the only requirement that the number of speakers has to be known, we obtain a WER of 5.9 %, which is comparable to the best reported WER on this data set. Furthermore, the estimated speaker activity from the mixture model serves as a diarization based on spatial information.

preprint2022arXiv

Monaural source separation: From anechoic to reverberant environments

Impressive progress in neural network-based single-channel speech source separation has been made in recent years. But those improvements have been mostly reported on anechoic data, a situation that is hardly met in practice. Taking the SepFormer as a starting point, which achieves state-of-the-art performance on anechoic mixtures, we gradually modify it to optimize its performance on reverberant mixtures. Although this leads to a word error rate improvement by 7 percentage points compared to the standard SepFormer implementation, the system ends up with only marginally better performance than a PIT-BLSTM separation system, that is optimized with rather straightforward means. This is surprising and at the same time sobering, challenging the practical usefulness of many improvements reported in recent years for monaural source separation on nonreverberant data.

preprint2022arXiv

SA-SDR: A novel loss function for separation of meeting style data

Many state-of-the-art neural network-based source separation systems use the averaged Signal-to-Distortion Ratio (SDR) as a training objective function. The basic SDR is, however, undefined if the network reconstructs the reference signal perfectly or if the reference signal contains silence, e.g., when a two-output separator processes a single-speaker recording. Many modifications to the plain SDR have been proposed that trade-off between making the loss more robust and distorting its value. We propose to switch from a mean over the SDRs of each individual output channel to a global SDR over all output channels at the same time, which we call source-aggregated SDR (SA-SDR). This makes the loss robust against silence and perfect reconstruction as long as at least one reference signal is not silent. We experimentally show that our proposed SA-SDR is more stable and preferable over other well-known modifications when processing meeting-style data that typically contains many silent or single-speaker regions.

preprint2022arXiv

Utterance-by-utterance overlap-aware neural diarization with Graph-PIT

Recent speaker diarization studies showed that integration of end-to-end neural diarization (EEND) and clustering-based diarization is a promising approach for achieving state-of-the-art performance on various tasks. Such an approach first divides an observed signal into fixed-length segments, then performs {\it segment-level} local diarization based on an EEND module, and merges the segment-level results via clustering to form a final global diarization result. The segmentation is done to limit the number of speakers in each segment since the current EEND cannot handle a large number of speakers. In this paper, we argue that such an approach involving the segmentation has several issues; for example, it inevitably faces a dilemma that larger segment sizes increase both the context available for enhancing the performance and the number of speakers for the local EEND module to handle. To resolve such a problem, this paper proposes a novel framework that performs diarization without segmentation. However, it can still handle challenging data containing many speakers and a significant amount of overlapping speech. The proposed method can take an entire meeting for inference and perform {\it utterance-by-utterance} diarization that clusters utterance activities in terms of speakers. To this end, we leverage a neural network training scheme called Graph-PIT proposed recently for neural source separation. Experiments with simulated active-meeting-like data and CALLHOME data show the superiority of the proposed approach over the conventional methods.

preprint2020arXiv

CHiME-6 Challenge:Tackling Multispeaker Speech Recognition for Unsegmented Recordings

Following the success of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th CHiME challenges we organize the 6th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition Challenge (CHiME-6). The new challenge revisits the previous CHiME-5 challenge and further considers the problem of distant multi-microphone conversational speech diarization and recognition in everyday home environments. Speech material is the same as the previous CHiME-5 recordings except for accurate array synchronization. The material was elicited using a dinner party scenario with efforts taken to capture data that is representative of natural conversational speech. This paper provides a baseline description of the CHiME-6 challenge for both segmented multispeaker speech recognition (Track 1) and unsegmented multispeaker speech recognition (Track 2). Of note, Track 2 is the first challenge activity in the community to tackle an unsegmented multispeaker speech recognition scenario with a complete set of reproducible open source baselines providing speech enhancement, speaker diarization, and speech recognition modules.

preprint2020arXiv

Demystifying TasNet: A Dissecting Approach

In recent years time domain speech separation has excelled over frequency domain separation in single channel scenarios and noise-free environments. In this paper we dissect the gains of the time-domain audio separation network (TasNet) approach by gradually replacing components of an utterance-level permutation invariant training (u-PIT) based separation system in the frequency domain until the TasNet system is reached, thus blending components of frequency domain approaches with those of time domain approaches. Some of the intermediate variants achieve comparable signal-to-distortion ratio (SDR) gains to TasNet, but retain the advantage of frequency domain processing: compatibility with classic signal processing tools such as frequency-domain beamforming and the human interpretability of the masks. Furthermore, we show that the scale invariant signal-to-distortion ratio (si-SDR) criterion used as loss function in TasNet is related to a logarithmic mean square error criterion and that it is this criterion which contributes most reliable to the performance advantage of TasNet. Finally, we critically assess which gains in a noise-free single channel environment generalize to more realistic reverberant conditions.

preprint2020arXiv

End-to-end training of time domain audio separation and recognition

The rising interest in single-channel multi-speaker speech separation sparked development of End-to-End (E2E) approaches to multi-speaker speech recognition. However, up until now, state-of-the-art neural network-based time domain source separation has not yet been combined with E2E speech recognition. We here demonstrate how to combine a separation module based on a Convolutional Time domain Audio Separation Network (Conv-TasNet) with an E2E speech recognizer and how to train such a model jointly by distributing it over multiple GPUs or by approximating truncated back-propagation for the convolutional front-end. To put this work into perspective and illustrate the complexity of the design space, we provide a compact overview of single-channel multi-speaker recognition systems. Our experiments show a word error rate of 11.0% on WSJ0-2mix and indicate that our joint time domain model can yield substantial improvements over cascade DNN-HMM and monolithic E2E frequency domain systems proposed so far.

preprint2020arXiv

Jointly optimal denoising, dereverberation, and source separation

This paper proposes methods that can optimize a Convolutional BeamFormer (CBF) for jointly performing denoising, dereverberation, and source separation (DN+DR+SS) in a computationally efficient way. Conventionally, cascade configuration composed of a Weighted Prediction Error minimization (WPE) dereverberation filter followed by a Minimum Variance Distortionless Response beamformer has been usedas the state-of-the-art frontend of far-field speech recognition, however, overall optimality of this approach is not guaranteed. In the blind signal processing area, an approach for jointly optimizing dereverberation and source separation (DR+SS) has been proposed, however, this approach requires huge computing cost, and has not been extended for application to DN+DR+SS. To overcome the above limitations, this paper develops new approaches for jointly optimizing DN+DR+SS in a computationally much more efficient way. To this end, we first present an objective function to optimize a CBF for performing DN+DR+SS based on the maximum likelihood estimation, on an assumption that the steering vectors of the target signals are given or can be estimated, e.g., using a neural network. This paper refers to a CBF optimized by this objective function as a weighted Minimum-Power Distortionless Response (wMPDR) CBF. Then, we derive two algorithms for optimizing a wMPDR CBF based on two different ways of factorizing a CBF into WPE filters and beamformers. Experiments using noisy reverberant sound mixtures show that the proposed optimization approaches greatly improve the performance of the speech enhancement in comparison with the conventional cascade configuration in terms of the signal distortion measures and ASR performance. It is also shown that the proposed approaches can greatly reduce the computing cost with improved estimation accuracy in comparison with the conventional joint optimization approach.