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Self-Supervised Learning for Anomalous Sound Detection

Kevin Wilkinghoff

202436 citationsDOI

Abstract

State-of-the-art anomalous sound detection (ASD) systems are often trained by using an auxiliary classification task to learn an embedding space. Doing so enables the system to learn embeddings that are robust to noise and are ignoring non-target sound events but requires manually annotated meta information to be used as class labels. However, the less difficult the classification task becomes, the less informative are the embeddings and the worse is the resulting ASD performance. A solution to this problem is to utilize selfsupervised learning (SSL). In this work, feature exchange (FeatEx), a simple yet effective SSL approach for ASD, is proposed. In addition, FeatEx is compared to and combined with existing SSL approaches. As the main result, a new state-of-the-art performance for the DCASE2023 ASD dataset is obtained that outperforms all other published results on this dataset by a large margin.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceMargin (machine learning)Task (project management)EmbeddingArtificial intelligenceNoise (video)Pattern recognition (psychology)Feature (linguistics)Feature vectorMachine learningSpeech recognitionClass (philosophy)Feature extractionImage (mathematics)LinguisticsPhilosophyManagementEconomicsMusic and Audio ProcessingSpeech and Audio ProcessingAnomaly Detection Techniques and Applications
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