|  | Call for Papers
 IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing
 Special Issue on
 Spoofing and Countermeasures for Automatic Speaker Verification
 
 Automatic speaker verification (ASV) offers a low-cost and flexible biometric solution to
 person authentication. While the reliability of ASV systems is now considered sufficient
 to support mass-market adoption, there are concerns that the technology is vulnerable to
 spoofing, also referred to as presentation attacks. Replayed, synthesized and converted
 speech spoofing attacks can all project convincing, high-quality speech signals that are
 representative of other, specific speakers and thus present a genuine threat to the
 reliability of ASV systems.
 
 Recent years have witnessed a movement in the community to develop spoofing
 countermeasures, or presentation attack detection (PAD) technology to help protect ASV
 systems from fraud. These efforts culminated in the first standard evaluation platform
 for the assessment of spoofing and countermeasures of automatic speaker verification ?
 the Automatic Speaker Verification Spoofing and Countermeasures Challenge (ASVspoof) ?
 which was held as a special session at Interspeech 2015.
 
 This special issue is expected to present original papers describing the very latest
 developments in spoofing and countermeasures for ASV. The focus of the special issue
 includes, but is not limited to the following topics related to spoofing and
 countermeasures for ASV:
 
 - vulnerability analysis of previously unconsidered spoofing methods;
 - advanced methods for standalone countermeasures;
 - advanced methods for joint ASV and countermeasure modelling;
 - information theoretic approaches for the assessment of spoofing and countermeasures;
 - spoofing and countermeasures in adverse acoustic and channel conditions;
 - generalized and speaker-dependent countermeasures;
 - speaker obfuscation, impersonation, de-identification, disguise, evasion and adapted
 countermeasures;
 - analysis and comparison of human performance in the face of spoofing;
 - new evaluation protocols, datasets, and performance metrics for the assessment of
 spoofing and countermeasures for ASV;
 - countermeasure methods using other modality or multimodality that are applicable to
 speaker verification
 
 Also invited are submissions of exceptional quality with a tutorial or overview nature.
 Creative papers outside the areas listed above but related to the overall scope of the
 special issue are also welcome. Prospective authors can contact the Guest Editors to
 ascertain interest on such topics.
 
 Prospective authors should visit
 http://www.signalprocessingsociety.org/publications/periodicals/jstsp/ for submission
 information. Manuscripts should be submitted at
 http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jstsp-ieee and will be peer reviewed according to
 standard IEEE processes.
 
 Important Dates:
 - Manuscript submission due: August 15, 2016 (extended)
 - First review completed: October 15, 2016
 - Revised manuscript due: December 1, 2016
 - Second review completed: February 1, 2017
 - Final manuscript due: March 1, 2017
 - Publication date: June, 2017
 
 Guest Editors:
 Junichi Yamagishi, National Institute of Informatics, Japan, email: jyamagis@nii.ac.jp
 Nicholas Evans, EURECOM, France, email: evans@eurecom.fr
 Tomi Kinnunen, University of Eastern Finland, Finland, email: tomi.kinnunen@uef.fi
 Phillip L. De Leon, New Mexico State University & VoiceCipher, USA, email:
 pdeleon@nmsu.edu
 Isabel Trancoso, INESC-ID, Portugal, email: Isabel.Trancoso@inesc-id.pt
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