This application is based on International Application No. PCT/IL03/00684, filed on Aug. 18, 2003, incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention generally relates to an apparatus and method for audio content analysis, summation and marking. More particularly, the present invention relates to an apparatus and method for a analyzing content of audio records, marking and summing the same into a single channel.
Recordable audio interactions comprise typically two or more audio channels. Such audio channels are associated with one or more specific audio input devices, such as a microphone device, utilized for voice input by one or more participants in an audio interaction. In order to achieve optimal performance presently available content based audio extraction and analysis systems typically assume that the inputted audio signal is separated such that each audio signal contains the recording of a single audio channel only. However, in order to achieve storage efficiency, audio recording systems typically operate in a manner such that the audio signals generated by the separate channels constituting the audio interaction are summed and compressed into an integrated recording.
As a result, recording systems that provide content analysis components typically utilize an architecture that includes an additional logging device for separately recording the two or more separate audio signals received via two or more separate input channels of each audio interaction. The recorded interactions are then saved within a temporary storage space. Subsequently, a computer program, typically residing on a server, obtains the pair of audio signals of each recorded interaction from the storage unit and extracts audio-based content by running successively a required set of Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) programs. The function of the ASR programs is to analyze speech in order to recognize specific speech elements and identify particular characteristics of a speaker, such as age, gender, emotional state, and the like. The content-based audio output is stored subsequently in a database for the purposes of retrieval and for subsequent specific data-mining applications.
The above-described solution has several disadvantages. The additional logging device is typically implemented as a hardware unit. Thus, the installation and utilization of the logging device involve higher costs and increased complexity both in the installation, upkeep and upgrade of the system. Furthermore, the separate storage of the data received from the separate input devices, such as the microphones, involves increased storage space requirements. Typically, in the logging-device based configuration the execution of the content analysis by the content analysis server does not provide for real time alarm activation and for pre-defined responsive actions following the identification of pre-defined events.
Therefore, it would be easily perceived by one with ordinary skills in the art that there is a need for a new and advanced method and apparatus that would provide for the content analysis of the recorded, summed and compressed audio data The new method and apparatus will preferably provide for full integration of all non-audio content into the summed signal and will support enhanced filtering of interactions for further analysis of the selected calls.
The present invention provides for a method and apparatus for processing audio interactions, marking and summing the same. At a later stage the invention provides for a method and apparatus for extraction and processing of the summed channel. The summed channel is marked with control data.
A first aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus for the analysis, marking and summing of audio channel content and control data, the apparatus comprising an audio channel marking component to extract from an audio channel delivering a signal carrying encoded audio content signal-specific characteristics and channel-specific control information, and to generate from the extracted control information and signal characteristics channel-specific marking data, an audio summing component to sum the signal delivered via the audio channel into a summed signal, and to generate signal summing control information; and a marking and summing embedding component to insert the generated marking data and summing data into the summed signal, thereby, generating a summed signal carrying combined audio content, marking and summing data into the summed signal.
The apparatus can further comprise an embedded marking and summing control data extraction component to extract marking and summing data and spectral feature vectors data from the decompressed signal; an audio channel recognition component to identify at least one audio channel from the uncompressed signal associated with the extracted marking and summing control data; and an audio channel separation component to separate the decompressed signal into the constituent channels thereof, thereby, enabling for the extraction and separation of previously generated summed signal.
The apparatus can further comprise a spectral features extraction component to analyze the signal delivered by the audio channel and to generate spectral features vector data characterizing the audio content of the signal. Also included is a compressing component to process the summed audio signal including the embedded marking and summing information in order to generate a compressed signal; an automatic number identification component to identify the origin of the audio channel delivering the signal carrying encoded audio content, a dual tone multi frequency component to extract traffic control information from the signal delivered by the audio channel.
The apparatus can further comprise a group of digital signal processing devices to provide for audio content analysis prior to the marking, summing and compressing of the signal, the group of digital signal processing devices comprising any one of the following components: a talk analysis statistics component to generate talk statistics from the audio content carried by the signal; an excitement detection component to identify emotional characteristics of the audio content carried by the signal; an age detection component to identify the age of a speaker associated with a speech segment of the audio content carried by the signal; and a gender detection component to identify the gender of a speaker associated with a speech segment of the audio content carried by the signal.
The apparatus can also comprise a decompression component to decompress the summed signal, a digital signal processing devices for content analysis, the group of the digital signal processing devices comprising any of the following components: a transcription component to transform speech elements of the audio content of the signal to text; and a word spotting component to identify pre-defined words in the speech elements of the audio content.
Also, the apparatus can comprise one or more storage units to store the summed and compressed signal carrying audio content and marking and summing control data; a content analysis server to provide for channel-specific content analysis of the signal carrying audio content and a content analysis database to store the results of the content analysis.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method for the analysis marking and summing of audio content, the method comprising the steps of analyzing one or more signals carrying audio content and traffic control data delivered via one or more audio channels to generate channel-specific control data, and signal-specific spectral characteristics; generating channel-specific marking control data from the channel-specific control data and the signal-specific spectral features vector data; summing the signals carrying audio content into a summed signal; and generating summation control data; and embedding the channel-specific control data, the segment-specific summation data, and the signal-specific spectral features vector data into the summed signal; thereby, generating a summed signal carrying combined audio content, channel-specific control data, segment-specific summation data, and spectral features vector data into the summed signal. The method can further comprise the steps of: extracting the marking and summing data from the summed signal; identifying the channel-specific signal within the summed signal; and separating the channel-specific signal from the summed signal; thereby providing a channel-specific signal carrying channel-specific audio content for audio content analysis.
The method can also comprise the step of compressing the summed signal in order to transform the signal to a compressed format signal; decompress the summed and compressed signal; store the summed signal carrying audio content and marking and summing control data on a storage device; obtain the summed signal from the storage device in order to perform audio channel separation and channel-specific content analysis; and storing the results of the content analysis on a storage device to provide for data mining options for additional applications; marking of the audio channel in accordance with the traffic control data carried by the at least one signal. The separation of the summed signal is performed in accordance with the traffic control data carried by the signals. The marking of the at least one audio channel is accomplished through selectively marking speech segments included in the at least one signal associated with different speakers. The separation of the summed signal is accomplished through selectively marking speech segments included in the signals associated with different speakers. The embedding of the marking and summing control data in the summed signal is achieved via data hiding. The data hiding is performed preferably by the pulse code modulation robbed-bit method or by code excited linear prediction compression method.
The method may be operative in a first stage of the processing in the generation of a summed signal carrying encoded audio content and marking and summing control data and providing in a second stage of the processing a channel-specific signal carrying channel-specific audio content for audio content analysis.
The benefits and advantages of the present invention will become more readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the relevant art after reviewing the following detailed description and accompanying drawings, wherein:
An apparatus and method for content analysis-related processing of two or more time synchronized audio signals constituting an audio interaction is disclosed. Audio interactions are analyzed, marked and summed into one channel. The analysis and control data are also embedded into the same summed channel.
Two or more discrete audio signals generated during an audio interaction are analyzed. The audio signals received separately from distinct input channels and marked in order to identify the source of the signals (telephone number, line, extension, LAN address) the type of the signals (speech, tone, silence, noise, and the like), and the length of signal segments during an audio content analysis. Particular elements of the content analysis, such as speaker verification, word spotting, speech-to-text, and the like, which typically obtain low-level performances when processing a summed audio signal, are performed on the separate signals prior to marking, summing, compressing, and storage of the audio signals. Subsequent to the performance of the particular content analysis specific segments of the audio signals are marked, summed, compressed and stored appropriately as a marked, summed and compressed integrated signal. Channel-specific notational control data is generated during the processing of the separate signal. Notational control data includes technical channel information, such as the identification or the source of the channel and technical audio segment information, such as the type and length of the audio segment. The notational control data is stored simultaneously in order to be provided as control information for subsequent processing. In addition, speech features vectors and spectral features vectors are extracted from the signal by specific pre-processing modules. During the summation of the channels segment-specific summation control data, such as signal segment number, segment length, and the like, is generated, and added to the notational control data. The channel-specific notational control data, the segment-specific summation control data, the speech features vector data, and the spectral features vector data are embedded into the summed audio signal. Next, or a later time, an analysis is performed by a content analysis server that utilizes the marked, summed, compressed and stored audio signal with the embedded control data associated with the signal stored on a storage device.
The proposed apparatus and method provide several major advantages. The utilization of a specific hardware logging could be dispensed with and thereby cost and time of installation, maintenance or upgrade are substantially reduced. The proposed solution could be hardware-based, software-based or any combination thereof. As a result, increased flexibility is achieved with substantially reduced material costs and development time requirements. The summation and the compression of the originally separate audio signals provide for reduced storage requirements and therefore accomplish lower storage costs. A practically complete reliability of channel separation is achieved despite the summed audio storage, since the channel separation is based on a Mark & Sum (M&S) computer program operative within the apparatus of the present invention.
The M&S computer program is implemented and is operating within the computerized device of the present invention. The M&S program is operative in the channel-specific notation of the audio signal segments. The channel notation is established by the parameters of the audio signal, such as the source of the audio signal, the type of the audio signal, the type of the signal source, such as a specific speaker device, telephone line, extension, Local Area Network (LAN) address, and the like. The M&S program further operative in the summation of the audio signal segments. The output resulting from the processing is a summed signal that consists of successive audio content segments. The summed signal is subsequently compressed. The M&S program comprises two main modules: the channel marking module and the channel summing module. The channel marking module is operative in the extraction of the traffic-specific parameters of the signal, such as the signal source and other signal information. The channel marking module is further operative in the extraction of audio stream characteristics, such as inherent content-based information, energy level detection, and the like. The marking module is still further operative in the encoding of the control data and audio stream characteristics and in the marking of separate audio streams by robbing bits to embed the identified characteristics of the stream as an integral part of the video stream for later usage (channel separation, analysis, statistics, further processing, and the like). The summing module is operative in the summing of the separate streams (including the embedded identified characteristics of the signal) where the summed signal consists of successive signal segments. Note should be taken that the marking and summing modules could be co-located on the same integrated circuit board or could be implemented across several integrated circuit boards, across several computing platforms or even across several physical locations within a network. The M&S program is typically more reliable than conventional audio analysis. Since processing is preferably performed in real-time, alerts and appropriate alert-specific pre-defined response options related to non-linguistic content can be provided in real-time as well. The proposed solution provides flexible, efficient and easy packaging of the various hardware/software components. For example, the processing could be configured such as to be built-in within the logging device and activated optionally via pre-installed Digital Signal Processing (DSP) components. Furthermore, the DSP components could be post-installed during optional system upgrades. As mentioned above, the various physical parts of the system may be located in a single location or in various locations spread across a few buildings located remotely one from the other.
Referring now to
Still referring to
The line interface board 64 is coupled on one side to at least two separated audio input channels that provide separated audio signals 62 constituting one or more audio interactions to the board 64. It will be appreciated that one line interface board 64 may be connected to a large number of lines (line-arrays) feeding separated audio channels or to a limited number of lines feeding a large number of summed audio channels. The separated audio signals 62 are processed by the line interface board 64 in order to provide for audio channel parameter identification. The audio channel identification is accomplished by the DTMF component 66 and the ANI component 68. The ANI component 68 in association with the DMF component 66 extract from the audio signal traffic-specific control signals that identify the signal source, signal source type, and the like. The DTMF component 66 is further capable of identifying additional traffic-specific parameters, such as a line number, a LAN address, and the like. In the first preferred embodiment of the invention, the separated audio signal 70 together with DTMF and ANI mark and sum information 71 is fed to the main process board 72 via an H.100 hardware bus for further processing. The audio segments are marked by the channel marking component 75 in accordance with the traffic-related parameters of the audio channel, such as the source of the audio signal, and the like. The separated audio signals are further processed by the various audio content analysis components. The components include an ED component 82, a GD component 84, a TAS component 80, and the like. The ED component 82 is operative in the identification of the emotional state of a speaker that generated the speech elements in the audio content. The GD component 84 is responsible for the identification of gender of a speaker that generated the speech elements in the audio content. The TAS component 80 is operative in the identification of a speaker that generated the speech elements in the audio content by creating talk statistics tables. The marked audio signals are then summed by the channel summing component 76. The audio segments are summed where the summed signal includes a set successive segments. During the summation process the channel-specific notational control data generated by the channel marking component 75 is embedded into the summed signal by the M&S embedding component 78. The embedding of the control data is accomplished by the utilization of data hiding techniques. A more detailed explanation of the techniques used will be described herein under.
The control data generated by the channel marking component 75 includes traffic-specific channel identification information, such as the channel source (telephone number, extension number, line number, LAN address). The notational control data could further include audio segment length, audio type (speech, noise, pause, silence), and the like. The channel control data is suitably encoded in order to enable the insertion thereof into the summed signal. The channel-specific notational control data resulting from the processing of the separated signals performed by the channel marking component 75 is sent within the summed signal 86 to the storage unit 88. The storage unit 88 stores the summed and compressed audio signals representing audio interactions and carrying embedded notational control data. The storage unit 88 also stores audio-based content indexed by interaction identification. Following the performance of the ASR modules, such as DTMF, ANI, GD, ED, WS, Age Detection (AD), TAS, word indexing, and the like, the resulting information is stored in the content analysis database 104. Subsequently, the content analysis database 104 could be further utilized by specific data mining applications.
Still referring to
Audio data hiding is a method to hide low data bit rate in an encoded voice stream with negligible voice quality modification during the decoding process. The proposed apparatus and method utilizes audio data hiding techniques in order to embed the M&S control information into the audio content stream. The proposed apparatus and method could implement several data hiding methods where the type of the data hiding method is selected in accordance with the compression methods used. Data hiding or steganography refers to techniques for embedding watermarks, signatures, tamper prevention, and captioning in digital data. Watermarking is an application, which embeds the least amount of data but requires the greatest robustness because the watermark is required for copyright protection. A watermark, unlike encryption, does not restrict access to the associated content but assists application systems by hiding data within the content. For the proposed apparatus and method the data hiding techniques would have the following features: a) the compressed audio with the embedded control data would be decompressed by a standard decoder device with perceptually minor quality degradation, b) the embedded data would be directly encoded into the media, rather than into the header, so that the data would remain intact across diverse data formats, c) preferably asymmetrical coding of the embedded data would be used since the purpose of water-marking is to keep the data in the audio signal but not necessarily making the data difficult to access, d) preferably low complexity coding of the embedded data would be utilized in order to reduce potential degradation in the performance of the system in terms of running time by the performance of the water-marking algorithm, and e) the proposed apparatus and method do not involve requirements for data encryption.
It was mentioned herein above that in the applicable preferred embodiments of the present invention various data hiding techniques would be utilized in order to accomplish the seamless embedding and the ready extraction of the control data into/from the summed audio content stream. Some of these exemplary data hiding techniques will be described next.
a) The Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) robbed-bit method: Robbed-bit coding is the simplest way to embed data in PCM format (8 bit per sample). By replacing the least significant bit in each sampling point by a coded binary string, a large amount of data could be encoded in an audio signal. An example of implementation is described by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) T1.403 standard that is utilized for the T-1 line transmission. In the proposed apparatus and method the decoding is bit exact in comparison with the compressed audio and the associated Mark and Sum control data. Thus, no distortion would be detected except for the watermarking. The degradation caused by the performance of the ASR module is negligible when compared to the original PCM channel. The implementation of the PCM robbed-bit coding method provides for the preservation of all the above-described features required by the proposed apparatus and method, i.e. the features a, b, c, d that have been mentioned in the previous paragraph. A major disadvantage of the PCM robbed-bit method is the vulnerability thereof to problematic compression.
b) The Code Excited Linear Prediction (CELP) compression method: CELP is a family of low bit-rate vocoders in the range of from 2.4 Kb/s up to 9.6 Kb/s. An example based on CELP vocoder is described in the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) g.729a standard. Statistical or perceptual gaps that could be filled with data are likely targets for removal by lossy audio compression. The key for successful data hiding is the locating of those gaps that are not suitable for exploitation by compression. CELP type compression readily preserves the spectral characteristics of the original audio. For example, the data could be hidden in the low significant spectral features, such as the LPC or the LSP or as short tones period.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Still referring to
Referring now to
Still referring to
Still referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
It should be noted that other objects, features and aspects of the present invention will become apparent in the entire disclosure and that modifications may be done without departing the gist and scope of the present invention as disclosed herein and claimed as appended herewith.
Also it should be noted that any combination of the disclosed and/or claimed elements, matters and/or items may fall under the modifications aforementioned.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IL03/00684 | 8/18/2003 | WO | 00 | 12/17/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/018097 | 2/24/2005 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3991268 | Goodall | Nov 1976 | A |
4145715 | Clever | Mar 1979 | A |
4527151 | Byrne | Jul 1985 | A |
4821118 | Lafreniere | Apr 1989 | A |
5051827 | Fairhurst | Sep 1991 | A |
5091780 | Pomerleau | Feb 1992 | A |
5303045 | Richards et al. | Apr 1994 | A |
5307170 | Itsumi et al. | Apr 1994 | A |
5353168 | Crick | Oct 1994 | A |
5404170 | Keating | Apr 1995 | A |
5491511 | Odle | Feb 1996 | A |
5519446 | Lee | May 1996 | A |
5646997 | Barton | Jul 1997 | A |
5734441 | Kondo et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
5742349 | Choi et al. | Apr 1998 | A |
5751346 | Mitchell et al. | May 1998 | A |
5790096 | Hill, Jr. | Aug 1998 | A |
5796439 | Hewett et al. | Aug 1998 | A |
5847755 | Wixson et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5895453 | Cook | Apr 1999 | A |
5920338 | Katz | Jul 1999 | A |
6014647 | Nizzar et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6028626 | Aviv et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6031573 | MacCormack et al. | Feb 2000 | A |
6037991 | Thro et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6070142 | McDounough et al. | May 2000 | A |
6081606 | Hansen et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6092197 | Coueignoux | Jul 2000 | A |
6094227 | Guimier | Jul 2000 | A |
6097429 | Seely et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6111610 | Faroudja | Aug 2000 | A |
6134530 | Bunting et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6138139 | Beck et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6167395 | Beck et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6170011 | Beck et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6185527 | Petkovic et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6212178 | Beck | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6230197 | Beck et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
6295367 | Crabtree et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6327343 | Epstein et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6330025 | Arazi et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6345305 | Beck et al. | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6404857 | Blair et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6411687 | Bohacek et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6427137 | Petrushin | Jul 2002 | B2 |
6434520 | Kanevsky et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6441734 | Gutta et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6549613 | Dikmen | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6559769 | Anthony et al. | May 2003 | B2 |
6570608 | Tserng | May 2003 | B1 |
6604108 | Nitahara | Aug 2003 | B1 |
6628835 | Brill et al. | Sep 2003 | B1 |
6704409 | Dilip et al. | Mar 2004 | B1 |
6737957 | Petrovic et al. | May 2004 | B1 |
7076427 | Scarano et al. | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7103806 | Horvitz | Sep 2006 | B1 |
20010040942 | Glowny et al. | Nov 2001 | A1 |
20010043697 | Cox et al. | Nov 2001 | A1 |
20010052081 | McKibben et al. | Dec 2001 | A1 |
20010053236 | Rhoads | Dec 2001 | A1 |
20020005898 | Kawada et al. | Jan 2002 | A1 |
20020010705 | Park et al. | Jan 2002 | A1 |
20020059283 | Shapiro et al. | May 2002 | A1 |
20020087385 | Vincent | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20030033266 | Schott et al. | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030059016 | Lieberman et al. | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20030128099 | Cockerham | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20030163360 | Galvin | Aug 2003 | A1 |
20040098295 | Sarlay et al. | May 2004 | A1 |
20040117185 | Scarano et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20040141508 | Schoeneberger et al. | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20040161133 | Elazar et al. | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20040215453 | Orbach | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20040249650 | Freedman et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050015286 | Rudnik et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20060093135 | Fiatal et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10358333 | Jul 2005 | DE |
1 484 892 | Aug 2004 | EP |
9916430.3 | Jul 1999 | GB |
WO 9529470 | Nov 1995 | WO |
WO 9801838 | Jan 1998 | WO |
WO 0073996 | Dec 2000 | WO |
WO 0237856 | May 2002 | WO |
WO 03013113 | Feb 2003 | WO |
WO 03067360 | Aug 2003 | WO |
WO 03067884 | Aug 2003 | WO |
WO 04 091250 | Oct 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060133624 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |