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Bridging Biological Hearing and Neuromorphic Computing: End-to-End Time-Domain Audio Signal Processing with Reservoir Computing

Rinku Sebastian, Simon O'Keefe, Martin Trefzer

Abstract

Despite the advancements in cutting-edge technologies, audio signal processing continues to pose challenges and lacks the precision of a human speech processing system. To address these challenges, we propose a novel approach to simplify audio signal processing by leveraging time-domain techniques and reservoir computing. Through our research, we have developed a real-time audio signal processing system by simplifying audio signal processing through the utilization of reservoir computers, which are significantly easier to train. Feature extraction is a fundamental step in speech signal processing, with Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCCs) being a dominant choice due to their perceptual relevance to human hearing. However, conventional MFCC extraction relies on computationally intensive time-frequency transformations, limiting efficiency in real-time applications. To address this, we propose a novel approach that leverages reservoir computing to streamline MFCC extraction. By replacing traditional frequency-domain conversions with convolution operations, we eliminate the need for complex transformations while maintaining feature discriminability. We present an end-to-end audio processing framework that integrates this method, demonstrating its potential for efficient and real-time speech analysis. Our results contribute to the advancement of energy-efficient audio processing technologies, enabling seamless deployment in embedded systems and voice-driven applications. This work bridges the gap between biologically inspired feature extraction and modern neuromorphic computing, offering a scalable solution for next-generation speech recognition systems.

Bridging Biological Hearing and Neuromorphic Computing: End-to-End Time-Domain Audio Signal Processing with Reservoir Computing

Abstract

Despite the advancements in cutting-edge technologies, audio signal processing continues to pose challenges and lacks the precision of a human speech processing system. To address these challenges, we propose a novel approach to simplify audio signal processing by leveraging time-domain techniques and reservoir computing. Through our research, we have developed a real-time audio signal processing system by simplifying audio signal processing through the utilization of reservoir computers, which are significantly easier to train. Feature extraction is a fundamental step in speech signal processing, with Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCCs) being a dominant choice due to their perceptual relevance to human hearing. However, conventional MFCC extraction relies on computationally intensive time-frequency transformations, limiting efficiency in real-time applications. To address this, we propose a novel approach that leverages reservoir computing to streamline MFCC extraction. By replacing traditional frequency-domain conversions with convolution operations, we eliminate the need for complex transformations while maintaining feature discriminability. We present an end-to-end audio processing framework that integrates this method, demonstrating its potential for efficient and real-time speech analysis. Our results contribute to the advancement of energy-efficient audio processing technologies, enabling seamless deployment in embedded systems and voice-driven applications. This work bridges the gap between biologically inspired feature extraction and modern neuromorphic computing, offering a scalable solution for next-generation speech recognition systems.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 13 sections, 7 equations, 9 figures, 6 tables.

Figures (9)

  • Figure 1: Topology of Reservoir computer
  • Figure 2: MFC extraction
  • Figure 3: Mel filter bank
  • Figure 4: A comparison between the conventional approach (a) where the reservoir is used as a classifier after complex pre-processing by different means and the approach proposed here (b) where RC is used as an end-to-end audio processing concept.
  • Figure 5: Time-domain filterbank
  • ...and 4 more figures