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In Journal of voice : official journal of the Voice Foundation

OBJECTIVE : Doctors, nowadays, primarily use auditory-perceptual evaluation, such as the grade, roughness, breathiness, asthenia, and strain scale, to evaluate voice quality and determine the treatment. However, the results predicted by individual physicians often differ, because of subjective perceptions, and diagnosis time interval, if the patient's symptoms are hard to judge. Therefore, an accurate computerized pathological voice quality assessment system will improve the quality of assessment.

METHOD : This study proposes a self_attention-based system, with a deep learning technology, named self_attention-based bidirectional long-short term memory (SA BiLSTM). Different pitches [low, normal, high], and vowels [/a/, /i/, /u/], were added into the proposed model, to make it learn how professional doctors evaluate the grade, roughness, breathiness, asthenia, and strain scale, in a high dimension view.

RESULTS : The experimental results showed that the proposed system provided higher performance than the baseline system. More specifically, the macro average of the F1 score, presented as decimal, was used to compare the accuracy of classification. The (G, R, and B) of the proposed system were (0.768±0.011, 0.820±0.009, and 0.815±0.009), which is higher than the baseline systems: deep neural network (0.395±0.010, 0.312±0.019, 0.321±0.014) and convolution neural network (0.421±0.052, 0.306±0.043, 0.3250±0.032) respectively.

CONCLUSIONS : The proposed system, with SA BiLSTM, pitches, and vowels, provides a more accurate way to evaluate the voice. This will be helpful for clinical voice evaluations and will improve patients' benefits from voice therapy.

Han Ji-Yan, Hsiao Ching-Ju, Zheng Wei-Zhong, Weng Ko-Cheng, Ho Guan-Min, Chang Chia-Yuan, Wang Chi-Te, Fang Shih-Hau, Lai Ying-Hui

2023-Jan-31

Auditory-perceptual evaluation—Deep learning—GRBAS scale—Improved clinical assessment—Self_attention—Voice disorder