ISCApad Archive » 2019 » ISCApad #249 » Events » Other Events » (2019-09-15) ASVspoof 2019 CHALLENGE |
ISCApad #249 |
Monday, March 11, 2019 by Chris Wellekens |
*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=* ASVspoof 2019 CHALLENGE: Are you concerned with the security of voice-driven interfaces? Are you searching for new challenges in machine learning and signal processing?
Join ASVspoof 2019 ? the effort to develop next-generation countermeasures for the automatic detection of spoofed/fake audio. In combining the forces of leading research institutes and industry, ASVspoof 2019 encompasses two separate sub-challenges in logical and physical access control, and provides a common database of the most advanced spoofing attacks to date. The aim is to study both the limits and opportunities of spoofing countermeasures in the context of automatic speaker verification and fake audio detection.
Given a short audio clip, determine whether it represents authentic/bona fide human speech, or a spoof/fake (replay, synthesized speech or converted voice). You will be provided with a large database of labelled training and development data and will develop machine learning and signal processing countermeasures to distinguish automatically between the two. Countermeasure performance will be evaluated jointly with an automatic speaker verification (ASV) system provided by the organisers.
BACKGROUND:
ADVANCES: Today?s state-of-the-art, TTS and VC technologies produce speech signals that are as good as perceptually indistinguishable from bona fide speech. The LOGICAL ACCESS sub-challenge aims to determine whether the advances in TTS and VC pose a greater threat to the reliability of automatic speaker verification and spoofing countermeasure technologies. The PHYSICAL ACCESS sub-challenge builds upon the 2017 edition with a far more controlled evaluation setup which extends the focus of ASVspoof to fake audio detection in, e.g. the manipulation of voice-driven interfaces (smart speakers).
METRICS: The 2019 edition also adopts a new metric, the tandem detection cost function (t-DCF). Adoption of the t-DCF metric aligns ASVspoof more closely to the field of ASV. The challenge nonetheless focuses on the development of standalone spoofing countermeasures; participation in ASVspoof 2019 does NOT require any expertise in ASV. The equal error rate (EER) used in previous editions remains as a secondary metric, supporting the wider implications of ASVspoof involving fake audio detection. SCHEDULE: Training and development data release: 19th December 2018 Evaluation data release: 15th February 2019 Deadline to submit evaluation scores: 22nd February 2019 Organisers return results to participants: 15th March 2019 INTERSPEECH paper submission deadline: 29th March 2019
REGISTRATION: Registration should be performed once only for each participating entity and by sending an email to registration@asvspoof.org with ?ASVspoof 2019 registration? as the subject line. The mail body should include: (i) the name of the team; (ii) the name of the contact person; (iii) their country; (iv) their status (academic/non-academic), and (v) the challenge scenario(s) for which they wish to participate (indicative only). Data download links will be communicated to registered contact persons only.
MAILING LIST: Subscribe to general mailing list by sending e-mail with subject line ?subscribe asvspoof2019? to sympa@asvspoof.org. To post messages to the mailing list itself, send e-mails to asvspoof2019@asvspoof.org
ORGANIZERS*: Massimiliano Todisco, EURECOM, France Md Sahidullah, Inria, France Héctor Delgado, EURECOM, France Xin Wang, National Institute of Informatics, Japan Nicholas Evans, EURECOM, France Tomi Kinnunen, University of Eastern Finland, Finland Kong Aik Lee, NEC, JAPAN Ville Vestman, University of Eastern Finland, Finland * Equal contribution
CONTRIBUTORS: University of Edinburgh, UK; Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan, University of Science and Technology of China, China; iFlytek Research, China; Saarland University / DFKI GmbH, Germany; Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; NTT Communication Science Laboratories, Japan; HOYA, Japan; Google LLC (Text-to-Speech team, Google Brain team, Deepmind); University of Avignon, France; Aalto University, Finland; University of Eastern Finland, Finland; EURECOM, France.
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