Add like
Add dislike
Add to saved papers

pDenoiser: A Personalized Speech Enhancement Neural Network for Pre-hospital Emergency Medical Services.

Pre-hospital emergency medical service (EMS) tasks often come with complex and diverse noise interferences, posing challenges in implementing ASR-based medical technologies and hindering efficient and accurate telephonic communication. Among the different types of noise distortion, interfering speech is especially annoying. To address these issues, our aim is to develop a technology capable of extracting the intended speech content of the target physician from noisy and mixed audio during EMS tasks. In this work, we propose a monoaural personalized speech enhancement (PSE) method called pDenoiser, which is a real-time neural network that operates in the time domain. By leveraging the prior vocalization cues of emergency physicians, pDenoiser selectively enhances target speech components while suppressing noise and nontarget speech components, thereby improving speech quality and speech recognition accuracy under noisy conditions. We demonstrate the potential value of our approach through evaluations on both public general-domain test sets and our self-collected real-world EMS test sets. The experimental results are promising, as our model effectively promotes both speech quality and ASR performance under various conditions and outperforms related methods across multiple evaluation metrics. Our methodology will hopefully elevate EMS efficiency and fortify security against nontarget speech during EMS tasks.

Full text links

We have located links that may give you full text access.
Can't access the paper?
Try logging in through your university/institutional subscription. For a smoother one-click institutional access experience, please use our mobile app.

Related Resources

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app

Mobile app image

Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app

All material on this website is protected by copyright, Copyright © 1994-2024 by WebMD LLC.
This website also contains material copyrighted by 3rd parties.

By using this service, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy.

Your Privacy Choices Toggle icon

You can now claim free CME credits for this literature searchClaim now

Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university

For the best experience, use the Read mobile app