Gender-Recognition-by-Voice

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Dataset:6036538



OpenML43437MaRDI QIDQ6036538

OpenML dataset with id 43437

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Full work available at URL: https://api.openml.org/data/v1/download/22102262/Gender-Recognition-by-Voice.arff

Upload date: 23 March 2022
Copyright license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International



Dataset Characteristics

Number of features: 21 (numeric: 20, symbolic: 0 and in total binary: 0 )
Number of instances: 3,168
Number of instances with missing values: 0
Number of missing values: 0

Voice Gender Gender Recognition by Voice and Speech Analysis This database was created to identify a voice as male or female, based upon acoustic properties of the voice and speech. The dataset consists of 3,168 recorded voice samples, collected from male and female speakers. The voice samples are pre-processed by acoustic analysis in R using the seewave and tuneR packages, with an analyzed frequency range of 0hz-280hz (human vocal range). The Dataset The following acoustic properties of each voice are measured and included within the CSV:

meanfreq: mean frequency (in kHz) sd: standard deviation of frequency median: median frequency (in kHz) Q25: first quantile (in kHz) Q75: third quantile (in kHz) IQR: interquantile range (in kHz) skew: skewness (see note in specprop description) kurt: kurtosis (see note in specprop description) sp.ent: spectral entropy sfm: spectral flatness mode: mode frequency centroid: frequency centroid (see specprop) peakf: peak frequency (frequency with highest energy) meanfun: average of fundamental frequency measured across acoustic signal minfun: minimum fundamental frequency measured across acoustic signal maxfun: maximum fundamental frequency measured across acoustic signal meandom: average of dominant frequency measured across acoustic signal mindom: minimum of dominant frequency measured across acoustic signal maxdom: maximum of dominant frequency measured across acoustic signal dfrange: range of dominant frequency measured across acoustic signal modindx: modulation index. Calculated as the accumulated absolute difference between adjacent measurements of fundamental frequencies divided by the frequency range label: male or female

Accuracy Baseline (always predict male) 50 / 50 Logistic Regression 97 / 98 CART 96 / 97 Random Forest 100 / 98 SVM 100 / 99 XGBoost 100 / 99 Research Questions An original analysis of the data-set can be found in the following article: Identifying the Gender of a Voice using Machine Learning The best model achieves 99 accuracy on the test set. According to a CART model, it appears that looking at the mean fundamental frequency might be enough to accurately classify a voice. However, some male voices use a higher frequency, even though their resonance differs from female voices, and may be incorrectly classified as female. To the human ear, there is apparently more than simple frequency, that determines a voice's gender. Questions

What other features differ between male and female voices? Can we find a difference in resonance between male and female voices? Can we identify falsetto from regular voices? (separate data-set likely needed for this) Are there other interesting features in the data?

CART Diagram

Mean fundamental frequency appears to be an indicator of voice gender, with a threshold of 140hz separating male from female classifications. References The Harvard-Haskins Database of Regularly-Timed Speech Telecommunications Signal Processing Laboratory (TSP) Speech Database at McGill University, Home VoxForge Speech Corpus, Home Festvox CMU_ARCTIC Speech Database at Carnegie Mellon University



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