5,610 research outputs found
Speaker change detection using BIC: a comparison on two datasets
Abstract — This paper addresses the problem of unsupervised speaker change detection. We assume that there is no prior knowledge on the number of speakers or their identities. Two methods are tested. The first method uses the Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC), investigates the AudioSpectrumCentroid and AudioWaveformEnvelope features, and implements a dynamic thresholding followed by a fusion scheme. The second method is a real-time one that uses a metric-based approach employing line spectral pairs (LSP) and the BIC criterion to validate a potential change point. The experiments are carried out on two different datasets. The first set was created by concatenating speakers from the TIMIT database and is referred to as the TIMIT data set. The second set was created by using recordings from the MPEG-7 test set CD1 and broadcast news and is referred to as the INESC dataset. I
Bosonic molecules in rotating traps
We present a variational many-body wave function for repelling bosons in
rotating traps, focusing on rotational frequencies that do not lead to
restriction to the lowest Landau level. This wave function incorporates
correlations beyond the Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) mean field approximation, and it
describes rotating boson molecules (RBMs) made of localized bosons that form
polygonal-ring-like crystalline patterns in their intrinsic frame of reference.
The RBMs exhibit characteristic periodic dependencies of the ground-state
angular momenta on the number of bosons in the polygonal rings. For small
numbers of neutral bosons, the RBM ground-state energies are found to be always
lower than those of the corresponding GP solutions, in particular in the regime
of GP vortex formation.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. LATEX, 5 pages with 5 figures. For
related papers, see http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~ph274cy
Surface Engineering for Phase Change Heat Transfer: A Review
Among numerous challenges to meet the rising global energy demand in a
sustainable manner, improving phase change heat transfer has been at the
forefront of engineering research for decades. The high heat transfer rates
associated with phase change heat transfer are essential to energy and industry
applications; but phase change is also inherently associated with poor
thermodynamic efficiencies at low heat flux, and violent instabilities at high
heat flux. Engineers have tried since the 1930's to fabricate solid surfaces
that improve phase change heat transfer. The development of micro and
nanotechnologies has made feasible the high-resolution control of surface
texture and chemistry over length scales ranging from molecular levels to
centimeters. This paper reviews the fabrication techniques available for
metallic and silicon-based surfaces, considering sintered and polymeric
coatings. The influence of such surfaces in multiphase processes of high
practical interest, e.g., boiling, condensation, freezing, and the associated
physical phenomena are reviewed. The case is made that while engineers are in
principle able to manufacture surfaces with optimum nucleation or thermofluid
transport characteristics, more theoretical and experimental efforts are needed
to guide the design and cost-effective fabrication of surfaces that not only
satisfy the existing technological needs, but also catalyze new discoveries
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