Abstract :
Human voice is characteristic for an individual. The ability to recognize a speaker by his/her voice can be a valuable biometric tool with enormous commercial as well as academic potential. Commercially, it can be utilized for ensuring secure access to any system. Academically, it can shed light on the speech processing abilities of the brain as well as the speech mechanism. In fact, this feature is being used preliminarily, along with other biometrics, including face, iris and fingerprint recognition, for commercial security products. How humans recognize someone from his/her voice has been an elusive ability to define and reproduce artificially. Research is still ongoing in this area. The paper views the speaker identification problem from the perspective of digital signal processing. A solution based on cepstral analysis is investigated and results presented. The fair success rate of the solution argues that the cepstral analysis approach is promising.
Keywords :
biometrics (access control); cepstral analysis; fast Fourier transforms; speaker recognition; speech processing; FFT; biometric tool; cepstral analysis; digital signal processing; fast Fourier transform; speaker identification; speech mechanism; speech processing; Biometrics; Cepstral analysis; Digital signal processing; Fingerprint recognition; Human voice; Iris; Potential well; Security; Speech processing; Speech recognition;