Acoustic sleepiness detection: Framework and validation of a speech-adapted pattern recognition approach

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Abstract

This article describes a general framework for detecting sleepiness states on the basis of prosody, articulation, and speech-quality-related speech characteristics. The advantages of this automatic real-time approach are that obtaining speech data is nonobstrusive and is free from sensor application and calibration efforts. Different types of acoustic features derived from speech, speaker, and emotion recognition were employed (frame-level-based speech features). Combing these features with high-level contour descriptors, which capture the temporal information of frame-level descriptor contours, results in 45,088 features per speech sample. In general, the measurement process follows the speech-adapted steps of pattern recognition: (1) recording speech, (2) preprocessing, (3) feature computation (using perceptual and signal-processing-related features such as, e.g., fundamental frequency, intensity, pause patterns, formants, and cepstral coefficients), (4) dimensionality reduction, (5) classification, and (6) evaluation. After a correlation-filter-based feature subset selection employed on the feature space in order to find most relevant features, different classification models were trained. The best model-namely, the support-vector machine-achieved 86.1% classification accuracy in predicting sleepiness in a sleep deprivation study (two-class problem, N 5 12; 01.00-08.00 a.m.). © 2009 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Krajewski, J., Batliner, A., & Golz, M. (2009). Acoustic sleepiness detection: Framework and validation of a speech-adapted pattern recognition approach. Behavior Research Methods, 41(3), 795–804. https://doi.org/10.3758/BRM.41.3.795

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