An investigation of depressed speech detection: Features and normalization

N Cummins, J Epps… - …, 2011 - researchprofiles.canberra.edu.au
INTERSPEECH 2011 12th Annual Conference of the …, 2011researchprofiles.canberra.edu.au
In recent years, the problem of automatic detection of mental illness from the speech signal
has gained some initial interest, however questions remaining include how speech
segments should be selected, what features provide good discrimination, and what benefits
feature normalization might bring given the speakerspecific nature of mental disorders. In
this paper, these questions are addressed empirically using classifier configurations
employed in emotion recognition from speech, evaluated on a 47-speaker …
Abstract
In recent years, the problem of automatic detection of mental illness from the speech signal has gained some initial interest, however questions remaining include how speech segments should be selected, what features provide good discrimination, and what benefits feature normalization might bring given the speakerspecific nature of mental disorders. In this paper, these questions are addressed empirically using classifier configurations employed in emotion recognition from speech, evaluated on a 47-speaker depressed/neutral read sentence speech database. Results demonstrate that (1) detailed spectral features are well suited to the task,(2) speaker normalization provides benefits mainly for less detailed features, and (3) dynamic information appears to provide little benefit. Classification accuracy using a combination of MFCC and formant based features approached 80% for this database.
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