Abstract

In this work, we present a universal codebook-based speech enhancement framework that relies on a single codebook to encode both speech and noise components. The atomic speech presence probability (ASPP) is defined as the probability that a given codebook atom encodes speech at a given point in time. We develop ASPP estimators based on binaural cues including the interaural phase and level difference (IPD and ILD), the interaural coherence magnitude (ICM), as well as a combined version leveraging the full interaural transfer function (ITF). We evaluate the performance of the resulting ASPP-based speech enhancement algorithms on binaural mixtures of reverberant speech and real-world noise. The proposed approach improves both objective speech quality and intelligibility over a wide range of input SNR, as measured with PESQ and binaural STOI metrics, outperforming two binaural speech enhancement benchmark methods. We show that the proposed ITF-based ASPP approach achieves a good balance of the trade-off between binaural noise reduction and binaural cue preservation.

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