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In the development process of noise-reduction algorithms, an objective machine-driven intelligibility measure which shows high correlation with speech intelligibility is of great interest. Besides reducing time and costs compared to real listening experiments, an objective intelligibility measure could also help provide answers on how to improve the intelligibility of noisy unprocessed speech. In this paper, a short-time objective intelligibility measure (STOI) is presented, which shows high correlation with the intelligibility of noisy and time-frequency weighted noisy speech (e.g., resulting from noise reduction) of three different listening experiments. In general, STOI showed better correlation with speech intelligibility compared to five other reference objective intelligibility models. In contrast to other conventional intelligibility models which tend to rely on global statistics across entire sentences, STOI is based on shorter time segments (386 ms). Experiments indeed show that it is beneficial to take segment lengths of this order into account. In addition, a free Matlab implementation is provided.
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Cees Taal
SNV Netherlands Development Organisation
Richard C. Hendriks
University of Toronto
Richard Heusdens
Netherlands Defence Academy
IEEE Transactions on Audio Speech and Language Processing
Delft University of Technology
Oticon Medical (Denmark)
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Taal et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d941039402b8412aa3cafc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tasl.2011.2114881
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