DocumentCode :
1650840
Title :
Multiple hypotheses at multiple scales for audio novelty computation within music
Author :
Kaiser, Florian ; Peeters, G.
Author_Institution :
STMS IRCAM, UPMC, Paris, France
fYear :
2013
Firstpage :
231
Lastpage :
235
Abstract :
Novelty-based segmentation of audio signals has proven good performances for the estimation of boundaries of structural sections within music pieces. However, boundaries are detected only if structural sections satisfy the condition of sufficient acoustic inner-homogeneity. While this constraint is very restrictive and not representative of all musical contents, we propose in this paper to extend the detection of acoustic novelty to transitions between homogeneous and non-homogeneous sections and vice versa. Moreover, the length of the considered sections for the boundary detection is crucial, we also introduce a multi-scale novelty approach that allows to capture boundaries between sections of different temporal scales in a same segmentation. Evaluation of the combination of these two methods proves convincing results for temporal segmentation of music pieces. Embedding the algorithm in a music structure segmentation system, we show that performances can be consistently improved for this task.
Keywords :
audio signal processing; music; acoustic inner-homogeneity; acoustic novelty detection; audio novelty computation; audio segmentation; audio signals; boundaries estimation; capture boundaries; homogeneous sections; multiple hypotheses; multiscale novelty approach; music pieces; music structure Segmentation; musical contents; nonhomogeneous sections; novelty-based segmentation; structural sections; temporal segmentation; Acoustic measurements; Acoustics; Equations; Feature extraction; Kernel; Multiple signal classification; Visualization; Audio Novelty; Audio Segmentation; Music Structure Segmentation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
ISSN :
1520-6149
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICASSP.2013.6637643
Filename :
6637643
Link To Document :
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