Single and dual wavelength exposure of photoresist
J. LaRue, C. Ting
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
In this letter, we propose a discriminative modeling approach for the speaker verification problem that uses polynomial kernel support vector machines (PK-SVMs). The proposed approach is rooted in an equivalence relationship between the state-of-the-art probabilistic linear discriminant analysis (PLDA) and second degree polynomial kernel methods. We present two techniques for overcoming the memory and computational challenges that PK-SVMs pose. The first of these, a kernel evaluation simplification trick, eliminates the need to explicitly compute dot products for a huge number of training samples. The second technique makes use of the massively parallel processing power of modern graphical processing units. We performed experiments on the Phase I speaker verification track of the DARPA sponsored Robust Automatic Transcription of Speech (RATS) program. We found that, in the multi-session enrollment experiments, second degree PK-SVMs outperformed PLDA across all tasks in terms of the official evaluation metric, and third and fourth degree PK-SVMs provided a performance improvement over the second degree PK-SVMs. Furthermore, for the "30s-30s" task, a linear score combination between the PLDA and PK-SVM based systems provided 27% improvement relative to the PLDA baseline in terms of the official evaluation metric. © 1994-2012 IEEE.
J. LaRue, C. Ting
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
David Cash, Dennis Hofheinz, et al.
Journal of Cryptology
Moutaz Fakhry, Yuri Granik, et al.
SPIE Photomask Technology + EUV Lithography 2011
David L. Shealy, John A. Hoffnagle
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2007