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Fusing linguistic and acoustic information for automated forensic speaker comparison.

Authors :
Sergidou, E.K.
Ypma, Rolf
Rohdin, Johan
Worring, Marcel
Geradts, Zeno
Bosma, Wauter
Source :
Science & Justice; Sep2024, Vol. 64 Issue 5, p485-497, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• We supplement acoustic analysis with frequent-word analysis for speaker comparison. • We see improved Cllr across datasets, speaker genders and recording conditions. • We observe that gains are the highest when recording conditions are noisy. Verifying the speaker of a speech fragment can be crucial in attributing a crime to a suspect. The question can be addressed given disputed and reference speech material, adopting the recommended and scientifically accepted likelihood ratio framework for reporting evidential strength in court. In forensic practice, usually, auditory and acoustic analyses are performed to carry out such a verification task considering a diversity of features, such as language competence, pronunciation, or other linguistic features. Automated speaker comparison systems can also be used alongside those manual analyses. State-of-the-art automatic speaker comparison systems are based on deep neural networks that take acoustic features as input. Additional information, though, may be obtained from linguistic analysis. In this paper, we aim to answer if, when and how modern acoustic-based systems can be complemented by an authorship technique based on frequent words, within the likelihood ratio framework. We consider three different approaches to derive a combined likelihood ratio: using a support vector machine algorithm, fitting bivariate normal distributions, and passing the score of the acoustic system as additional input to the frequent-word analysis. We apply our method to the forensically relevant dataset FRIDA and the FISHER corpus, and we explore under which conditions fusion is valuable. We evaluate our results in terms of log likelihood ratio cost ( C llr ) and equal error rate (EER). We show that fusion can be beneficial, especially in the case of intercepted phone calls with noise in the background. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13550306
Volume :
64
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Science & Justice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179597964
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scijus.2024.07.001