4.6 Article

Scalogram as a Representation of Emotional Speech

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages 154044-154057

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3127581

Keywords

Emotion recognition; Speech recognition; Databases; Speech processing; Task analysis; Mel frequency cepstral coefficient; Hidden Markov models; Discrete wavelet transforms; emotion recognition; fuzzy neural networks; speech analysis

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The article discusses the challenges of implementing emotion recognition systems based on spoken text and presents a method using scalograms and natural language processing algorithms to accomplish this task. Testing was done on emotional speech recordings in Polish, English, German, and Danish, with results ranging from 62% to over 94% accuracy depending on language and classifier used. The use of fuzzy classifiers was found to greatly improve the efficiency of classification.
It is very hard to implement the emotion recognition system based on spoken text. Computer applications have a huge problem with understanding non-literal meaning of statements as well as irony or a situational joke. The article describes how to represent emotional speech in the form of scalograms which are the result of speech signal processing by Discrete Wavelet Transform (DTW). The method of processing scalograms in order to extract input data for natural language processing algorithms in order to recognise the emotional state is also presented. The following emotional states were considered during the research: joy, anger, boredom, sadness, fear and neutral state. The developed method has been tested on databases containing recordings of emotional speech in the following languages: Polish, English, German and Danish. Depending on the language and classifier used, obtained results ranged from over 62% to over 94%. The use of fuzzy classifiers greatly improves the time and efficiency of classification.

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