Emergent Mind

Abstract

In recent years, speech emotion recognition (SER) has been used in wide ranging applications, from healthcare to the commercial sector. In addition to signal processing approaches, methods for SER now also use deep learning techniques which provide transfer learning possibilities. However, generalizing over languages, corpora and recording conditions is still an open challenge. In this work we address this gap by exploring loss functions that aid in transferability, specifically to non-tonal languages. We propose a variational autoencoder (VAE) with KL annealing and a semi-supervised VAE to obtain more consistent latent embedding distributions across data sets. To ensure transferability, the distribution of the latent embedding should be similar across non-tonal languages (data sets). We start by presenting a low-complexity SER based on a denoising-autoencoder, which achieves an unweighted classification accuracy of over 52.09% for four-class emotion classification. This performance is comparable to that of similar baseline methods. Following this, we employ a VAE, the semi-supervised VAE and the VAE with KL annealing to obtain a more regularized latent space. We show that while the DAE has the highest classification accuracy among the methods, the semi-supervised VAE has a comparable classification accuracy and a more consistent latent embedding distribution over data sets.

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