Publication

Reverse Correlation for analyzing MLP Posterior Features in ASR

Hynek Hermansky, Joel Praveen Pinto
2008
Conference paper
Abstract

In this work, we investigate the reverse correlation technique for analyzing posterior feature extraction using an multilayered perceptron trained on multi-resolution RASTA (MRASTA) features. The filter bank in MRASTA feature extraction is motivated by human auditory modeling. The MLP is trained based on an error criterion and is purely data driven. In this work, we analyze the functionality of the combined system using reverse correlation analysis.

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Related concepts (12)
Rank correlation
In statistics, a rank correlation is any of several statistics that measure an ordinal association—the relationship between rankings of different ordinal variables or different rankings of the same variable, where a "ranking" is the assignment of the ordering labels "first", "second", "third", etc. to different observations of a particular variable. A rank correlation coefficient measures the degree of similarity between two rankings, and can be used to assess the significance of the relation between them.
Kendall rank correlation coefficient
In statistics, the Kendall rank correlation coefficient, commonly referred to as Kendall's τ coefficient (after the Greek letter τ, tau), is a statistic used to measure the ordinal association between two measured quantities. A τ test is a non-parametric hypothesis test for statistical dependence based on the τ coefficient. It is a measure of rank correlation: the similarity of the orderings of the data when ranked by each of the quantities.
Bayesian information criterion
In statistics, the Bayesian information criterion (BIC) or Schwarz information criterion (also SIC, SBC, SBIC) is a criterion for model selection among a finite set of models; models with lower BIC are generally preferred. It is based, in part, on the likelihood function and it is closely related to the Akaike information criterion (AIC). When fitting models, it is possible to increase the maximum likelihood by adding parameters, but doing so may result in overfitting.
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