Integrated Sidelobe Cancellation and Linear Prediction Kalman Filter for Joint Multi-Microphone Speech Dereverberation, Interfering Speech Cancellation, and Noise Reduction

In multi-microphone speech enhancement, reverberation as well as additive noise and/or interfering speech are commonly suppressed by deconvolution and spatial filtering, e.g., using multi-channel linear prediction (MCLP) on the one hand and beamforming, e.g., a generalized sidelobe canceler (GSC), o...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE/ACM transactions on audio, speech, and language processing speech, and language processing, 2020, Vol.28, p.740-754
Hauptverfasser: Dietzen, Thomas, Doclo, Simon, Moonen, Marc, van Waterschoot, Toon
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In multi-microphone speech enhancement, reverberation as well as additive noise and/or interfering speech are commonly suppressed by deconvolution and spatial filtering, e.g., using multi-channel linear prediction (MCLP) on the one hand and beamforming, e.g., a generalized sidelobe canceler (GSC), on the other hand. In this article, we consider several reverberant speech components, whereof some are to be dereverberated and others to be canceled, as well as a diffuse (e.g., babble) noise component to be suppressed. In order to perform both deconvolution and spatial filtering, we integrate MCLP and the GSC into a novel architecture referred to as integrated sidelobe cancellation and linear prediction (ISCLP), where the sidelobe-cancellation (SC) filter and the linear prediction (LP) filter operate in parallel, but on different microphone signal frames. Within ISCLP, we estimate both filters jointly by means of a single Kalman filter. We further propose a spectral Wiener gain post-processor, which is shown to relate to the Kalman filter's posterior state estimate. The presented ISCLP Kalman filter is benchmarked against two state-of-the-art approaches, namely first a pair of alternating Kalman filters respectively performing dereverberation and noise reduction, and second an MCLP+GSC Kalman filter cascade. While the ISCLP Kalman filter is roughly M^2 times less expensive than both reference algorithms, where M denotes the number of microphones, it is shown to perform at least similarly as compared to the former, and to outperform the latter. A MATLAB implementation is available.
ISSN:2329-9290
2329-9304
DOI:10.1109/TASLP.2020.2966869