Deep Audio Waveform Prior
Abstract
Convolutional neural networks contain strong priors for generating natural looking images [1]. These priors enable image denoising, super resolution, and inpainting in an unsupervised manner. Previous attempts to demonstrate similar ideas in audio, namely deep audio priors, (i) use hand picked architectures such as harmonic convolutions, (ii) only work with spectrogram input, and (iii) have been used mostly for eliminating Gaussian noise [2]. In this work we show that existing SOTA architectures for audio source separation contain deep priors even when working with the raw waveform. Deep priors can be discovered by training a neural network to generate a single corrupted signal when given white noise as input. A network with relevant deep priors is likely to generate a cleaner version of the signal before converging on the corrupted signal. We demonstrate this restoration effect with several corruptions: background noise, reverberations, and a gap in the signal (audio inpainting).
Cite
@article{arxiv.2207.10441,
title = {Deep Audio Waveform Prior},
author = {Arnon Turetzky and Tzvi Michelson and Yossi Adi and Shmuel Peleg},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.10441},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
Interspeech 2022