Abstract

Despite its many prima facie attractive properties for Forensic Speaker Recognition, F0 is regarded as having limited forensic value due to its large within-speaker variability. However, its forensic use to date has been limited mostly to its long-term mean and standard deviation. This paper examines the discriminatory potential, within a Likelihood Ratio-based approach, of additional parametric features from the distribution of long-term F0: its skew, kurtosis, modal F0 and modal density. Motivated by the observation that the shape of the long-term F0 distribution shows less within-speaker occasion-to-occasion difference, we report a forensic discrimination experiment with non-contemporaneous speech samples from 201 male Japanese speakers. Using a multivariate Likelihood Ratio as discriminant distance with the six LTF0 distribution parameters, an equal error rate of 10.7% is obtained from 201 target and 80400 non-target trials. We also investigate how the EER degrades as a function of amount of voiced speech.

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