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Vocoder-Projected Feature Discriminator

Published: August 25, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2508.17874v1

By: Takuhiro Kaneko , Hirokazu Kameoka , Kou Tanaka and more

Potential Business Impact:

Makes computer voices sound more real, faster.

Business Areas:
Speech Recognition Data and Analytics, Software

In text-to-speech (TTS) and voice conversion (VC), acoustic features, such as mel spectrograms, are typically used as synthesis or conversion targets owing to their compactness and ease of learning. However, because the ultimate goal is to generate high-quality waveforms, employing a vocoder to convert these features into waveforms and applying adversarial training in the time domain is reasonable. Nevertheless, upsampling the waveform introduces significant time and memory overheads. To address this issue, we propose a vocoder-projected feature discriminator (VPFD), which uses vocoder features for adversarial training. Experiments on diffusion-based VC distillation demonstrated that a pretrained and frozen vocoder feature extractor with a single upsampling step is necessary and sufficient to achieve a VC performance comparable to that of waveform discriminators while reducing the training time and memory consumption by 9.6 and 11.4 times, respectively.

Page Count
5 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Sound