Cost-sensitive detection with variational autoencoders for environmental acoustic sensing
in
Workshop: Machine Learning for Audio Signal Processing (ML4Audio)
Abstract
(+ Ivan Kiskin, Davide Zilli, Marianne Sinka, Henry Chan, Kathy Willis) Environmental acoustic sensing involves the retrieval and processing of audio signals to better understand our surroundings. While large-scale acoustic data make manual analysis infeasible, they provide a suitable playground for machine learning approaches. Most existing machine learning techniques developed for environmental acoustic sensing do not provide flexible control of the trade-off between the false positive rate and the false negative rate. This paper presents a cost-sensitive classification paradigm, in which the hyper-parameters of classifiers and the structure of variational autoencoders are selected in a principled Neyman- Pearson framework. We examine the performance of the proposed approach using a dataset from the HumBug project1 which aims to detect the presence of mosquitoes using sound collected by simple embedded devices.