Abstract
In this study, we concentrate on replacing the process of extracting hand-crafted acoustic feature with end-to-end DNN using complementary high-resolution spectrograms. As a result of advance in audio devices, typical characteristics of a replayed speech based on conventional knowledge alter or diminish in unknown replay configurations. Thus, it has become increasingly difficult to detect spoofed speech with a conventional knowledge-based approach. To detect unrevealed characteristics that reside in a replayed speech, we directly input spectrograms into an end-to-end DNN without knowledge-based intervention. Explorations dealt in this study that differentiates from existing spectrogram-based systems are twofold: complementary information and high-resolution. Spectrograms with different information are explored, and it is shown that additional information such as the phase information can be complementary. High-resolution spectrograms are employed with the assumption that the difference between a bona-fide and a replayed speech exists in the details. Additionally, to verify whether other features are complementary to spectrograms, we also examine raw waveform and an i-vector based system. Experiments conducted on the ASVspoof 2019 physical access challenge show promising results, where t-DCF and equal error rates are 0.0570 and 2.45 % for the evaluation set, respectively.
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URL
http://arxiv.org/abs/1904.10134