English

Isolated and Ensemble Audio Preprocessing Methods for Detecting Adversarial Examples against Automatic Speech Recognition

Sound 2018-09-13 v1 Computation and Language Cryptography and Security Machine Learning Neural and Evolutionary Computing Audio and Speech Processing

Abstract

An adversarial attack is an exploitative process in which minute alterations are made to natural inputs, causing the inputs to be misclassified by neural models. In the field of speech recognition, this has become an issue of increasing significance. Although adversarial attacks were originally introduced in computer vision, they have since infiltrated the realm of speech recognition. In 2017, a genetic attack was shown to be quite potent against the Speech Commands Model. Limited-vocabulary speech classifiers, such as the Speech Commands Model, are used in a variety of applications, particularly in telephony; as such, adversarial examples produced by this attack pose as a major security threat. This paper explores various methods of detecting these adversarial examples with combinations of audio preprocessing. One particular combined defense incorporating compressions, speech coding, filtering, and audio panning was shown to be quite effective against the attack on the Speech Commands Model, detecting audio adversarial examples with 93.5% precision and 91.2% recall.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1809.04397,
  title  = {Isolated and Ensemble Audio Preprocessing Methods for Detecting Adversarial Examples against Automatic Speech Recognition},
  author = {Krishan Rajaratnam and Kunal Shah and Jugal Kalita},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1809.04397},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

Accepted for oral presentation at the 30th Conference on Computational Linguistics and Speech Processing (ROCLING 2018)

R2 v1 2026-06-23T04:03:46.859Z