This repository implements the audio super-resolution model proposed in:
V. Kuleshov, Z. Enam, and S. Ermon. Audio Super Resolution Using Neural Networks. ICLR 2017 (Workshop track)
V. Kuleshov, Z. Enam, P. W. Koh, and S. Ermon. Deep Convolutional Time Series Translation, ArXiv 2017
The model is implemented in Tensorflow and Keras and uses several additional libraries. Specifically, we used:
tensorflow==0.12.1
keras==1.2.1
numpy==1.12.0
scipy==0.18.1
librosa==0.4.3
h5py==2.6.0
matplotlib==1.5.1
To install this package, simply clone the git repo:
git clone https://github.com/kuleshov/audio-super-res.git;
cd audio-super-res;
The repository is structured as follows.
./samples
: audio samples from the model./src
: model source code./docs
: html source code for the project webpage./data
: code to download the model data
The ./data
subfolder contains code for preparing the VCTK speech dataset.
Make sure you have enough disk space and bandwidth (the dataset is over 18G, uncompressed).
You need to type:
cd ./data/vctk;
make;
Next, you must prepare the dataset for training:
you will need to create pairs of high and low resolution sound patches (typically, about 0.5s in length).
We have included a script called prep_vctk.py
that does that, which works as follows.
usage: prep_vctk.py [-h] [--file-list FILE_LIST] [--in-dir IN_DIR] [--out OUT]
[--scale SCALE] [--dimension DIMENSION] [--stride STRIDE]
[--interpolate] [--low-pass] [--batch-size BATCH_SIZE]
[--sr SR] [--sam SAM]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--file-list FILE_LIST
list of input wav files to process
--in-dir IN_DIR folder where input files are located
--out OUT path to output h5 archive
--scale SCALE scaling factor
--dimension DIMENSION
dimension of patches
--stride STRIDE stride when extracting patches
--interpolate interpolate low-res patches with cubic splines
--low-pass apply low-pass filter when generating low-res patches
--batch-size BATCH_SIZE
we produce # of patches that is a multiple of batch
size
--sr SR audio sampling rate
--sam SAM subsampling factor for the data
The output of the data preparation step are two .h5
archives containing, respectively, the training and validation pairs of high/low resolution sound patches.
You can also generate these by running make
in the corresponding directory, e.g.
cd ./speaker1;
make;
This will use a set of default parameters.
We have included code to prepare two datasets.
- The single-speaker dataset consists only of VCTK speaker #1; it is relatively quick to train a model (a few hours).
- The multi-speaker dataset uses the last 8 VCTK speakers for evaluation, and the rest for training; it takes several days to train the model, and several hours to prepare the data.
We suggest starting with the single-speaker dataset.
Running the model is handled by the src/run.py
script.
usage: run.py train [-h] --train TRAIN --val VAL [-e EPOCHS]
[--batch-size BATCH_SIZE] [--logname LOGNAME]
[--layers LAYERS] [--alg ALG] [--lr LR]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--train TRAIN path to h5 archive of training patches
--val VAL path to h5 archive of validation set patches
-e EPOCHS, --epochs EPOCHS
number of epochs to train
--batch-size BATCH_SIZE
training batch size
--logname LOGNAME folder where logs will be stored
--layers LAYERS number of layers in each of the D and U halves of the
network
--alg ALG optimization algorithm
--lr LR learning rate
For example, to run the model on data prepared for the single speaker dataset, you would type:
python run.py train \
--train ../data/vctk/speaker1/vctk-speaker1-train.4.16000.8192.4096.h5 \
--val ../data/vctk/speaker1/vctk-speaker1-val.4.16000.8192.4096.h5 \
-e 120 \
--batch-size 64 \
--lr 3e-4 \
--logname singlespeaker
The above run will store checkpoints in ./singlespeaker.lr0.000300.1.g4.b64
.
The run.py
command may be also used to evaluate the model on new audio samples.
usage: run.py eval [-h] --logname LOGNAME [--out-label OUT_LABEL]
[--wav-file-list WAV_FILE_LIST] [--r R] [--sr SR]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--logname LOGNAME path to training checkpoint
--out-label OUT_LABEL
append label to output samples
--wav-file-list WAV_FILE_LIST
list of audio files for evaluation
--r R upscaling factor
--sr SR high-res sampling rate
In the above example, we would type:
python run.py eval \
--logname ./singlespeaker.lr0.000300.1.g4.b64/model.ckpt-20101 \
--out-label singlespeaker-out \
--wav-file-list ../data/vctk/speaker1/speaker1-val-files.txt \
--r 4
This will look at each file specified via the --wav-file-list
argument (these must be high-resolution samples),
and create for each file f.wav
three audio samples:
f.singlespeaker-out.hr.wav
: the high resolution versionf.singlespeaker-out.lr.wav
: the low resolution version processed by the modelf.singlespeaker-out.sr.wav
: the super-resolved version
These will be found in the same folder as f.wav
. Because of how our model is defined, the number of samples in the input must be a multiple of 2**downscaling_layers
; if that's not the case, we will clip the input file (potentially shortening it by a fraction of a second).
We would like to emphasize a few points.
- Machine learning algorithms are only as good as their training data. If you want to apply our method to your personal recordings, you will most likely need to collect additional labeled examples.
- You will need a very large model to fit large and diverse datasets (such as the 1M Songs Dataset)
- Interestingly, super-resolution works better on aliased input (no low-pass filter). This is not reflected well in objective benchmarks, but is noticeable when listening to the samples. For applications like compression (where you control the low-res signal), this may be important.
- More generally, the model is very sensitive to how low resolution samples are generated. Even the type of low-pass filter (Butterworth, Chebyshev) will affect performance.
The same architecture can be used on many time series tasks outside the audio domain. We have successfully used it to impute functional genomics data and denoise EEG recordings. Stay tuned for more updates!
Send feedback to Volodymyr Kuleshov.