Abstract

Voice communication using an air-conduction microphone in noisy environments suffers from the degradation of speech audibility. Bone-conduction microphones (BCM) are robust against ambient noises but suffer from limited effective bandwidth due to their sensing mechanism. Although existing audio super-resolution algorithms can recover the high-frequency loss to achieve high-fidelity audio, they require considerably more computational resources than is available in low-power hearable devices. This paper proposes the first-ever real-time on-chip speech audio super-resolution system for BCM. To accomplish this, we built and compared a series of lightweight audio super-resolution deep-learning models. Among all these models, ATS-UNet was the most cost-efficient because the proposed novel Audio Temporal Shift Module (ATSM) reduces the network's dimensionality while maintaining sufficient temporal features from speech audio. Then, we quantized and deployed the ATS-UNet to low-end ARM micro-controller units for a real-time embedded prototype. The evaluation results show that our system achieved real-time inference speed on Cortex-M7 and higher quality compared with the baseline audio super-resolution method. Finally, we conducted a user study with ten experts and ten amateur listeners to evaluate our method's effectiveness to human ears. Both groups perceived a significantly higher speech quality with our method when compared to the solutions with the original BCM or air-conduction microphone with cutting-edge noise-reduction algorithms.

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