Sound-event recognition with a companion humanoid
Author(s) -
Maxime Janvier,
Xavier Alameda-Pineda,
Laurent Girinz,
Radu Horaud
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
hal (le centre pour la communication scientifique directe)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 2164-0572
DOI - 10.1109/humanoids.2012.6651506
Subject(s) - computer science , humanoid robot , event (particle physics) , robot , noise (video) , speech recognition , set (abstract data type) , artificial intelligence , feature vector , representation (politics) , feature (linguistics) , dimension (graph theory) , signal (programming language) , pattern recognition (psychology) , image (mathematics) , mathematics , linguistics , philosophy , politics , pure mathematics , political science , law , programming language , physics , quantum mechanics
International audienceIn this paper we address the problem of recognizing everyday sound events in indoor environments with a consumer robot. Sounds are represented in the spectro-temporal domain using the stabilized auditory image (SAI) representation. The SAI is well suited for representing pulse-resonance sounds and has the interesting property of mapping a time-varying signal into a fixed-dimension feature vector space. This allows us to map the sound recognition problem into a supervised classification problem and to adopt a variety of classifications schemes. We present a complete system that takes as input a continuous signal, splits it into significant isolated sounds and noise, and classifies the isolated sounds using a catalogue of learned sound-event classes. The method is validated with a large set of audio data recorded with a humanoid robot in a house. Extended experiments show that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art recognition scores with a twelve-class problem, while requiring extremely limited memory space and moderate computing power. A first real-time embedded implementation in a consumer robot show its ability to work in real conditions
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