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09 Jun 2021

Recently, a number of semi-supervised learning (SSL) methods, in the framework of deep learning (DL), were shown to achieve state-of-the-art results on image datasets, while using a (very) limited amount of labeled data. To our knowledge, these approaches adapted and applied to audio data are still sparse, in particular for audio tagging (AT). In this work, we adapted the Deep-Co-Training algorithm (DCT) to perform AT, and compared it to another SSL approach called Mean Teacher (MT), that has been used by the winning participants of the DCASE competitions these last two years. Experiments were performed on three standard audio datasets: Environmental Sound classification (ESC-10), UrbanSound8K, and Google Speech Commands. We show that both DCT and MT achieved performance approaching that of a fully supervised training setting, while using a fraction of the labeled data available, and the remaining data as unlabeled data. In some cases, DCT even reached the best accuracy, for instance, 72.6% using half of the labeled data, compared to 74.4% using all the labeled data. DCT also consistently outperformed MT in almost all configurations. For instance, the most significant relative gains brought by DCT reached 12.2% on ESC-10, compared to 7.6% with MT.

Chairs:
Romain Serizel

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