ICASSP 2003 (Hong Kong) : 2003.04.06-10 · PDF fileJoaoGomes, VictorBarroso,ISR ... Brazil...
Transcript of ICASSP 2003 (Hong Kong) : 2003.04.06-10 · PDF fileJoaoGomes, VictorBarroso,ISR ... Brazil...
2003 IEEE International
Conference on Acoustics, Speech,and Signal Processing
Proceedings
Volume V of VI
Sensor Array and Multichannel Signal ProcessingAudio and Electroacoustics
Multimedia Signal Processing
April 6-10, 2003
Hong Kong Exhibition and Convention Centre
Hong Kong
Sponsored by
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Signal Processing Society
4 IEEE
SPEC-L7.5: KERNEL INDEPENDENT COMPONENTANALYSIS IV - 876
Francis Bach, Michael Jordan, University of California, Berkeley, United States
SPEC-L7.6: THE KERNELMUTUAL INFORMATION IV - 880
Arthur Gretton, MPIfor Biological Cybernetics, Germany; RalfHerbrich, Microsoft Research, United Kingdom;Alexander Smola, Australian National University, Australia
Volume V
SAM-Ll: MULTICHANNEL IMAGING
SAM-L1.1: IMAGE COMBINATION FOR HIGH-FIELD PHASED-ARRAYMRI V -1
Rui Yan, Deniz Erdogmus, Erik G. Larsson, Jose C. Principe, Jeffrey R. Fitzsimmons, University ofFlorida, United States
SAM-L1.2: TIME-REVERSAL IMAGING FOR WIDEBAND UNDERWATERTARGET V - 5
CLASSIFICATION
Hongwei Liu, Nilanjan Dasgupta, Lawrence Carin, Duke University, United States
SAM-L1.3: BLIND MULTICHANNEL IMAGE RESTORATION USING SUBSPACE BASED V - 9
METHOD
Iwan Wirawan, Karim Abed-Meraim, Henri Maitre, ENST Paris, France; Pierre Duhamel, Supelec, France
SAM-L1.4: A REAL-TIME CURVE EVOLUTION-BASED IMAGE FUSION ALGORITHM FOR V -13
MULTISENSORY IMAGE SEGMENTATION
Yuhua Ding, George Vachtsevanos, Anthony Yezzi, Wayne Daley, Bonnie Heck-Ferri, Georgia Institute of Technology,United States
SAM-L1.5: ROBUST UNDERWATER IMAGING WITH FAST BROADBAND INCOHERENT V -17
SYNTHETIC APERTURE SONAR
Kae Yeet Foo, P. R. Atkins, T. Collins, University ofBirmingham, United Kingdom
SAM-L1.6: TIME SERffiS PROCESSING OF FLIR IMAGERY FORMTI AND CHANGE V - 21
DETECTION
Mehrdad Soumekh, State University ofNew York at Buffalo, United States; Susan Young, Nasser M. Nasrabadi, United
States Army Research Laboratory, United States
SAM-L2: BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION AND CHANNEL EQUALIZATION
SAM-L2.1: A NOVEL APPROACHFORTHEEQUALIZATION OF LOW FREQUENCY V - 25
RESPONSE IN THEAUTOMOTIVE SPACE
Lae-Hoon Kim, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea; Jun-Seok Lim, Sejong University, Republic ofKorea;Chulmin Choi, Koeng-Mo Sung, Seoul National University, Republic of Korea
SAM-L2.2: RELATIVE NEWTON METHOD FOR SIGNAL SEPARATION V - 29
Michael Zibulevsky, Technion - Israel Institute ofTechnology, Israel
SAM-L2.3: A NEW ICA ALGORITHM FOR BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION V - 33
Chin-Jen Ku, Terrence L. Fine, Cornell University, United States
SAM-L2.4: ROBUST EQUALIZATION BASED ON A NETWORKOF KALMANFILTERS IN V - 37
IMPULSIVE NOISE ENVIRONMENTS
Bessem Sayadi, Sylvie Marcos, LSS/SUPELEC/CNRS, France
SAM-L2.5: FOURTH ORDER BLIND IDENTIFICATION OF UNDERDETERMINED V - 41
MIXTURES OF SOURCES (FOBIUM)Anne Ferreol, Laurent Albera, Pascal Chevalier, Thales Communications, France
Ixxii
SAM-L2.6: A SUBSPACE APPROACHTO SINGLE CHANNEL SIGNAL SEPARATION USING V - 45
MAXIMUM LIKELIHOOD WEIGHTING FILTERS
Gil-Jin Jang, KAIST, Republic of Korea; Te-Won Lee, University ofCalifornia, San Diego, United States; Yung-Hwan Oh,
KAIST, Republic ofKorea
SAM-L3: MIMO SYSTEMS
SAM-L3.1: EFFICIENT STATISTICAL PRUNING FOR MAXIMUMLIKELIHOOD V - 49
DECODING
Radhika Gowaikar, Babak Hassibi, California Institute of Technology, United States
SAM-L3.2: POWER ALLOCATION AND BIT LOADINGFOR SPATIAL MULTIPLEXINGIN V - 53
MIMO SYSTEMS
Xi Zhang, Bjorn Ottersten, Royal Institute ofTechnology (KTH), Sweden
SAM-L3.3: FAST ANTENNA SUBSET SELECTION IN WIRELESS MIMOSYSTEMS V - 57
Mohammad Gharavi-Alkhansari, Mercator University, Germany; Alex Gershman, McMaster University, Canada
SAM-L3.4: CUT-OFF RATE BASED TRANSMIT OPTIMIZATION FOR SPATIAL V - 61
MULTIPLEXING ON GENERAL MIMO CHANNELS
Rohit Nabar, Helmut Boelcskei, ETH Zurich, Switzerland; Arogyaswami Paulraj, Stanford University, United States
SAM-L3.5: OPPORTUNISTIC TRANSMISSION SCHEDULING FOR MULTIUSER MIMO V - 65
SYSTEMS
Liang Dong, Teng Li, Yih-Fang Huang, University ofNotre Dame, United States
SAM-L3.6: LOWER BOUNDS ON THE CHANNEL ESTIMATION ERROR FOR V - 69
FAST-VARYING FREQUENCY-SELECTIVE RAYLEIGH MIMO CHANNELS
Osvaldo Simeone, Umberto Spagnolini, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
SAM-L4: APPLICATIONS OF MULTICHANNEL SIGNAL PROCESSING
SAM-L4.1: NEW METHODS FORHANDLING THE RANGE-DEPENDENCE OF THE V - 73
CLUTTER SPECTRUM IN NON-SIDELOOKING MONOSTATIC STAP RADARS
Fabian Lapierre, Marc Van Droogenbroeck, Jacques Verly, University ofLiege, Belgium
SAM-L4.2: IMPROVED INTERFERENCE CANCELLATION IN SYNTHESIS ARRAY RADIO V - 77
ASTRONOMY USING AUXILIARY ANTENNAS
Brian Jeffs, Karl Warnick, Lisha Li, Brigham Young University, United States
SAM-L4.3: DOPPLER COMPENSATION IN UNDERWATER CHANNELS USING V - 81
TIME-REVERSAL ARRAYS
Joao Gomes, Victor Barroso, ISR - Instituto Superior Tecnico, Portugal
SAM-L4.4: DUALPOLARIZATION GAIN ESTIMATION FOR RADIO TELESCOPE ARRAYS V - 85
Albert-Jan Boonstra, ASTRON, Netherlands; Alle-Jan van der Veen, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
SAM-L4.5: ANEW APPROACH FOR NEAR-FffiLD WIDEBANDSYNTHETIC APERTURE V - 89
BEAMFORMING
Fauzia Ahmad, Villanova University, United States; Gordon Frazer, DSTO, Australia; Saleem Kassam, University of
Pennsylvania, United States; Moeness Amin, Villanova University, United States
SAM-L4.6: ATRIAL FD3RILLATION ANALYSIS BASED ON ICA INCLUDING STATISTICAL AND V - 93
TEMPORAL SOURCE INFORMATION
Francisco Castells, Jorge Igual, Jose Joaquin Rieta, Politechnic University, Valencia, Spain; Cesar Sanchez, Universidad
de Castilla la Mancha, Spain; Jose Millet, Politechnic University, Valencia, Spain
SAM-PI: SPACE-TIME PROCESSING FOR COMMUNICATIONS
SAM-Pl.l: EXPLOITING SYMMETRY IN CHANNEL SHORTENING EQUALIZERS V - 97
Richard Martin, C. Richard Johnson, Jr., Cornell University, United States; Ming Ding, Brian Evans, University ofTexas,
Austin, United States
baciii
SAM-P1.2: A FAST RECURSIVE ALGORITHM FOROPTIMUM SEQUENTIAL SIGNAL V -101
DETECTION IN A BLAST SYSTEM
Jacob Benesty, Yiteng Huang, Jingdong Chen, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, United States
SAM-P1.3: ROBUST POWERADJUSTMENTFOR TRANSMIT BEAMFORMING IN V -105
CELLULAR COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Mehrzad Biguesh, Mercator University, Germany; Shahram Shahbazpanahi, Alex Gershman, McMaster University,
Canada
SAM-P1.4: ONTHE OPTIMAL TRANSMISSION STRATEGY FORTHE MIMO MAC WITH V -109
MMSE RECEIVER
Eduard Jorswieck, Heinrich-Hertz-Institut, Berlin, Germany; Holger Boche, Technical University ofBerlin, Germany
SAM-P1.5: BLIND IDENTIFICATION OF FIR MIMO CHANNELS BY GROUP V -113
DECORRELATION
SenjianAn, University ofMelbourne, Australia; Yingbo Hua, University ofCalifornia, Riverside, United States; Jonathan
H. Manton, University ofMelbourne, Australia
SAM-P1.6: LINEARPRECODING OVERTIME-VARYING CHANNELS IN TDDSYSTEMS V -117
Frank Dietrich, Raphael Hunger, Michael Joham, Wolfgang Utschick, Munich University of Technology, Germany
SAM-P1.7: DECODING OF FULL RATE SPACE-TIME BLOCKCODE WITHOUT CHANNEL V -121
STATE INFORMATION IN FREQUENCY-SELECTIVE CHANNELS
Zheng Zhao, Qinye Yin, Hong Zhang, Ke Deng, XVan Jiaotong University, China
SAM-P1.8: CONSTRAINED LS ALGORITHM FOR CHANNEL VECTORESTIMATION IN 2-D V -125
RAKE RECETVER
Jianming Wang, Southeast university, China; Chunming Zhao, Southeast University, China
SAM-P1.9: DECODING ALGORITHMS FORRECONFIGURABLE SPACE-TIME TURBO V -129
CODES
Meritxell Lamarca, Jose Antonio Lopez-Salcedo, Polytechnic University of Catalonia, Spain
SAM-P1.10: A NEW CROSS-CORRELATION AND CONSTANT MODULUS TYPE V -133
ALGORITHM FOR PAM-PSK SIGNALS
Jonathon Chambers, Yuhui Luo, King's College London, United Kingdom
SAM-P1.11: RECEIVED SIGNAL STRENGTH BASED MOBILE POSITIONINGVIA V - 137
CONSTRAINED WEIGHTEDLEAST SQUARES
Ka Wai Cheung, Hing Cheung So, City University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR ofChina; Wing-Kin Ma, Yiu-Tong
Chan, Chinese University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR of China
SAM-P2: SOURCE LOCALIZATION AND TRACKING
SAM-P2.1: COHERENT SOURCE LOCALIZATION USING VECTOR SENSOR ARRAYS V -141
Dayan Rahamim, Reuven Shavit, Joseph Tabrikian, Ben-Gurion University, Israel
SAM-P2.2: MULTI-STEP INFORMATION-DIRECTED SENSOR QUERYING IN V -145
DISTRIBUTED SENSOR NETWORKS
Juan Liu, Palo Alto Research Center, United States; Dragan Petrovic, University of California, Berkeley, United States;
Feng Zhao, Palo Alto Research Center, United States
SAM-P2.3: BINAURAL TRACKING OF MULTIPLE MOVING SOURCES V -149
Nicoleta Roman, DeLiang Wang, Ohio State University, United States
SAM-P2.4: TDOA-SDOA ESTIMATION WITH MOVING SOURCE AND RECEIVERS V -153
Yiu-Tong Chan, Chinese University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR ofChina; Dominic K. C. Ho, University ofMissouri-
Columbia, United States
SAM-P2.5: GEOMETRIC MICROPHONE ARRAY CALIBRATION BYMULTIDIMENSIONAL V -157
SCALING
Stan Birchfield, Quindi Corporation, United States
Ixxiv
SAM-P2.6: TEMPORAL SMOOTHINGFOR SUBSPACE TRACKING OF MULTIPATH V -161
SIGNALS IN FADING CHANNEL
Zhenghui Gu, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore; Erry Gunawan, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
SAM-P2.7: MIXED-STATEPARTICLE FILTERS FOR MULTIASPECT TARGETTRACKING V -165
IN IMAGE SEQUENCESMarcelo Bruno, Instituto Tecnologico de Aeronautica, Brazil
SAM-P2.8: AN UNBIASED ESTIMATOR FOR BEARINGS-ONLY TRACKING AND V -169
DOPPLER-BEARING TRACKING
Dominic K. C. Ho, University ofMissouri-Columbia, United States; Yiu-Tong Chan, Chinese University ofHong Kong,Hong Kong SAR of China
SAM-P2.9: SENSING FIELD: COVERAGE CHARACTERIZATION IN DISTRD3UTED V -173
SENSOR NETWORKS
Juan Liu, Palo Alto Research Center, United States; Xenofon Koutsoukos, Vanderbilt University, United States; James
Reich, Feng Zhao, Palo Alto Research Center, United States
SAM-P2.10: EXPERIMENTAL COMPARISON OF PARTICLE FILTERING ALGORITHMS FOR V -177
ACOUSTIC SOURCE LOCALIZATION IN A REVERBERANTROOM
Eric Lehmann, Australian National University, Australia; Darren Ward, Imperial College, United Kingdom; Robert
Williamson, Australian National University, Australia
SAM-P2.11: IMPROVING THE SPURIOUS PERFORMANCE OF A DIGITISED ARRAY V -181
RECEIVER
Feng Rice, Lang White, Adelaide University, Australia; Angus Massie, Defence Science and Technology Organisation,Australia
SAM-P3: DIRECTION-OF-ARRIVAL ESTIMATION
SAM-P3.1: ASYMPTOTICALLY OPTIMAL ESTIMATION OF DOA FOR NON-CIRCULAR V -185
SOURCESFROMSECOND ORDER MOMENTS
Jean-Pierre Delmas, INT, France
SAM-P3.2: WIDEBAND ARRAYSIGNAL PROCESSINGUSING MCMC METHODS V -189
William Ng, James P. Reilly, Thia Kirubarajan, McMaster University, Canada
SAM-P3.3: CONSTRAINED TST MUSICFORJOINT SPATIAL-TEMPORAL CHANNEL V -193
PARAMETERESTIMATION
Jen-Der Lin, Wen-Hsien Fang, National Taiwan University ofScience and Technology, Taiwan; Jiunn-Tsair Chen,
National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan
SAM-P3.4: TOWARD INTELLIGENT SENSORS - RELIABILITY FOR TIME DELAY BASED V -197
DIRECTION OF ARRIVAL ESTIMATES
Tuomo Pirinen, Pasi Pertila, Ari Visa, Tampere University ofTechnology, Finland
SAM-P3.5: SELECTING THE BEST AMONG SEVERAL ESTIMATES IN DOA ESTIMATION V - 201
Jean-Jacques Fuchs, IRISA/University de Rennes 1, France
SAM-P3.6: ANEW APPROACH TO ARRAYINTERPOLATION BY GENERATION OF V - 205
ARTIFICIAL SHIFT INVARIANCES: INTERPOLATED ESPRIT
Markus Buehren, Universitdt Stuttgart, Germany; Marius Pesavento, Johann F. Bohme, Ruhr-Universitdt Bochum,
Germany
SAM-P3.7: ARRAY SIGNAL PROCESSING IN THEKNOWNWAVEFORMAND STEERING V - 209
VECTOR CASE
Yi Jiang, Jian Li, University ofFlorida, United States; Petre Stoica, Uppsala University, Sweden
SAM-P3.8: ANTENNA ARRAYS FOR ENHANCED ESTIMATION OF AZIMUTH AND V - 213
ELEVATION
Houcem Gazzah, Sylvie Marcos, Ecole Superieure d'Electricite, France
Ixxv
SAM-P3.9: A SINGLE CHANNEL APPROACH TO HIGH RESOLUTION DIRECTION V - 217
FINDING AND BEAMFORMING
Chong Meng Samson See, DSO National Laboratories, Singapore
SAM-P3.10: DESIGN OF BROAD-BAND CIRCULAR RING MICROPHONE ARRAYFOR V - 221
SPEECHACQUISITION IN 3-D
Yunhong Li, K. C. Ho, University ofMissouri-Columbia, United States; Chiman Kwan, Intelligent Automation, Inc., United
States
SAM-P3.11: NEW SIGNAL SUBSPACE DIRECTION-OF-ARRIVAL ESTIMATOR FOR V - 225
WIDEBAND SOURCES
Yeo-Sun Yoon, Georgia Institute ofTechnology, United States; Lance Kaplan, Clark Atlanta University, United States;
James McClellan, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
SAM-P3.12: A NEW GIBBS SAMPLING DOAESTIMATOR BASED ON BAYESIAN METHOD V - 229
Jianguo Huang, Yi Sun, Kewei Liu, Hongfeng Qin, Northwestern Polytechnical University, China
SAM-P4: SIGNAL DETECTION AND ESTIMATION
SAM-P4.1: TWO-CHANNEL SIGNAL DETECTION AND SPEECH ENHANCEMENT BASED V - 233
ONTHE TRANSffiNT BEAM-TO-REFERENCERATIO
Israel Cohen, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel; Baruch Berdugo, Lamar Signal Processing Ltd., Israel
SAM-P4.2: TIME-DELAY ESTIMATION IN MIXTURES V - 237
Arie Yeredor, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
SAM-P4.3: A CHANGE DETECTION STATISTIC FOR REPEAT PASS INTERFEROMETRIC V - 241
SAR
Mark Preiss, Doug Gray, University ofAdelaide, Australia; Nick Stacy, Defence Science and Technology Organisation,Australia
SAM-P4.4: PARAMETERESTIMATION OF SPIRAL WAVES FROMATRIAL ELECTROGRAMS V - 245
Yuping Xiao, Yibin Zheng, DonaldJordan, Joseph Akar, David Haines, University ofVirginia, United States
SAM-P4.5: A UNIFORM OVERSAMPLED FILTER BANKAPPROACH TO INDEPENDENT V - 249
COMPONENT ANALYSIS
Hyung-Min Park, Korea Advanced Institute ofScience and Technology, Republic of Korea; Sang-Hoon Oh, Mokwon
University, Republic ofKorea; Soo-Young Lee, Korea Advanced Institute ofScience and Technology, Republic ofKorea
SAM-P4.6: A NOVEL ESTIMATOR AND PERFORMANCEBOUND FOR TIME PROPAGATION V - 253
AND DOPPLER BASED RADIO-LOCATION
Andreu Urruela, Jaume Riba, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain
SAM-P4.7: SOURCE DETECTION IN CORRELATED MULTICHANNEL SIGNAL AND NOISE V - 257
FffiLDS
Karim Oweiss, Michigan State University, United States
SAM-P4.8: SLIDING WINDOW ORTHONORMAL PAST ALGORITHM V - 261
Rolafid Badeau, Karim Abed-Meraim, Gael Richard, Bertrand David, Telecom-Paris, France
SAM-P4.9: MAXIMUM LIKELHIOOD JOINT ANGLEAND DELAY ESTIMATION IN V - 265
UNKNOWN NOISE FIELDS
Adel Belouchrani, Ecole Nationale Polytechnique, Algeria; SaidAouada, Curtin University of Technology, Australia
SAM-P4.10: MANAGINGDATAINCEST IN A DISTRIBUTED SENSOR NETWORK V - 269
Samuel McLaughlin, University ofMelbourne, Australia; Vikram Krishnamurthy, University ofBritish Columbia, Canada;Subhash Challa, University ofMelbourne, Australia
SAM-P4.11: THE VTP TEST FOR TRANSffiNTS OFEQUALDETECTABTLITY V - 273
PeterWillett, University ofConnecticut, United States; Z. Jane Wang, University ofMaryland, United States
SAM-P4.12: ON THE ESTIMATION OF INTERFEROMETRICPHASES FOR V - 277
MULTD3ASELEME SAR INTERFEROMETRY USING A RELAXATION-BASED TECHNIQUEAndreas Jakobsson, King's College London, United Kingdom; Fulvio Gini, Fabrizio Lombardini, University ofPisa, Italy
Ixxvi
SAM-P5: BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION
SAM-P5.1: TIME-FREQUENCY DOMAIN BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION -THE V - 281
INDEPENDENCE PROBLEMAND PROPOSED SOLUTION
Xuebin Hu, Hidefumi Kobatake, Tokyo University ofAgriculture & Technology, Japan
SAM-P5.2: SPSA FOR NOISY NON-STATIONARY BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION V - 285
Tariq Durrani, Universiy ofStrathclyde, United Kingdom; Gordon Morison, University ofStrathclyde, United Kingdom
SAM-P5.3: BLIND SOURCES SEPARATION BASED ON QUADRATIC TIME-FREQUENCY V - 289
REPRESENTATIONS: A METHODWITHOUT PRE-WHITENING
Laurent Giulieri, SIS-SDISITV, France; Nadege Thirion-Moreau, SIS-SD, ISITV, France; Pierre-Yves Arques, SIS-SD
ISITV, France
SAM-P5.4: SCALABLE NON-SQUARE BLIND SOURCESEPARATION IN THE PRESENCE V - 293
OF NOISE
Radu Balan, Justinian Rosea, Scott Rickard, Siemens Corporate Research, United States
SAM-P5.5: NEWEMALGORITHMS FOR SOURCE SEPARATION AND DECONVOLUTION V - 297
WITH A MICROPHONE ARRAY
Hagai Attias, Microsoft Research, United States
SAM-P5.6: NORMALISED NATURAL GRADIENT ALGORITHMFOR THE SEPARATION OF V - 301
CYCLOSTATIONARY SOURCES
Maria Jafari, Jonathon Chambers, King's College London, United Kingdom
SAM-P5.7: BLIND SEPARATION OF CONVOLUTTVE MTXTURES BASED ON SECOND V - 305
ORDER AND THIRD ORDER STATISTICS
Zhongfu Ye, University ofScience and Technology ofChina, China; Chunqi Chang, University ofHong Kong, Hong
Kong SAR ofChina; Chen Wang, Jian Zhao, University ofScience and Technology of China, China; Francis H. Y. Chan,
University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR of China
SAM-P5.8: BLIND SEPARATION USING A CLASS OF NEWINDEPENDENCE MEASURES V - 309
Yang Chen, Zhenya He, Southeast University, China
SAM-P5.9: ICA WITH MULTIPLE QUADRATIC CONSTRAINTS V - 313
Xuejun Liao, Lawrence Carin, Duke University, United States
SAM-P5.10: CONDITIONS ON SOURCES ANDMIXING MATRIX FOR SOLVING THE V - 317
PERMUTATION INDETERMINACY IN 2X2 INSTANTANEOUS BLIND SIGNAL
SEPARATION
Jakob van de Laar, Piet Sommen, Technische Universiteit Eindhoven, Netherlands
SAM-P5.11: BLIND SOURCESEPARATION BASED ON BINAURAL ICA V - 321
Tomoya Takatani, Tsuyoki Nishikawa, Hiroshi Saruwatari, Nara Institute ofScience and Technology, Japan
SAM-P6: ADAPTIVE BEAMFORMING AND SPACE-TIME PROCESSING
SAM-P6.1: MAINLOBEAND PEAKSIDELOBE CONTROL IN ADAPTIVE ARRAYS V - 325
Renbiao Wu, Civil Aviation University ofChina, China; Zhisong Wang, Jian Li, University ofFlorida, United States
SAM-P6.2: A GEOMETRICAL APPROACH TO ROBUSTMINIMUMVARIANCE V - 329
BEAMFORMING
Ngai Wong, Tung-Sang Ng, University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR of China; Venkataramanan Balakrishnan, Purdue
University, United States
SAM-P6.3: ROBUST ADAPTIVE BEAMFORMING USINGWORST-CASE SINR V - 333
OPTIMIZATION: A NEW DIAGONALLOADING-TYPE SOLUTION FORGENERAL-RANK
SIGNAL MODELS
Shahram Shahbazpanahi, Alex Gershman, Zhi-Quan Luo, Kon Max Wong, McMaster University, Canada
SAM-P6.4: ONROBUST CAPON BEAMFORMING AND DIAGONAL LOADING V - 337
Jian Li, University of Florida, United States; Petre Stoica, Uppsala University, Sweden; Zhisong Wang, University ofFlorida, United States
Ixxvii
SAM-P6.5: EFFICIENT METHOD TO DETERMINE DIAGONAL LOADING VALUE V - 341
Ning Ma, Joo Thiam Goh, DSO National Laboratories, Singapore
SAM-P6.6: ADAPTIVE BEAMFORMING WITH JOINT ROBUSTNESS AGAINST SIGNAL V - 345
STEERING VECTOR ERRORS ANDINTERFERENCE NONSTATIONARITY
Sergiy Vorobyov, Alex Gershman, Zhi-Quan Luo, McMaster University, Canada; Ning Ma, DSO National Laboratories,
Singapore
SAM-P6.7: ADAPTIVE BEAMFORMING FOR CYCLOSTATIONARY SIGNALS V - 349
Pascal Charge, Yide Wang, Joseph Saillard, IRCCyN, France
SAM-P6.8: SPACE-TIME INTERPOLATION FOR ADAPTIVE ARRAYS WITH LIMITED V - 353
TRAINING DATA
Vijay Varadarajan, Jeffrey Krolik, Duke University, United States
SAM-P6.9: BEAMFORMING-BASED CONVOLUTIVE SOURCE SEPARATION V - 357
WolfBaumann, Dorothea Kolossa, Reinhold Orglmeister, Berlin University of Technology, Germany
SAM-P6.10: CONSTANT BEAMWIDTH BEAMFORMERFOR DIFFERENCE FREQUENCY IN V - 361
PARAMETRIC ARRAY
Khim Sia Tan, Woon Seng Gan, Jun Yang, Meng Hwa Er, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
SAM-P6.11: ACOUSTIC BEAMFORMING EXPLOITING DIRECTIONALITY OF HUMAN V - 365
SPEECH SOURCES
Terence Betlehem, Australian National University, Australia; Robert Williamson, National ICTAustralia, Australia
SAM-P6.12: ON THE USE OF BEAMFORMINGFORESTIMATION OF SPATIALLY V - 369
DISTRIBUTED SIGNALS
MikaelTapio, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden
AUDIO-LI: ECHO CANCELLATION
AUDIO-L1.1: A SHORT-SORT M-MAX NLMSPARTIAL-UPDATE ADAPTIVE FILTERWITH V - 373
APPLICATIONS TO ECHO CANCELLATION
Patrick Naylor, Warren Sherliker, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
AUDIO-L1.2: A CENTRALIZED ACOUSTIC ECHO CANCELLEREXPLOITINGMASKING V - 377
PROPERTIES OF THE HUMANEAR
Xiaojian Lu, Benoit Champagne, McGill University, Canada
AUDIO-L1.3: A ROBUST APPROACH TOTHE PERMUTATION PROBLEM OF V - 381
FREQUENCY-DOMAIN BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION
Hiroshi Sawada, Ryo Mukai, Shoko Araki, Shoji Makino, NTT Corporation, Japan
AUDIO-L1.4: AN EXTENDED MULTD3ELAY FILTER: FAST LOW-DELAY ALGORITHMS V - 385
FOR VERY HIGH-ORDER ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS
Herbert Buchner, Walter Kellermann, Universitdt Erlangen-NUrnberg, Germany; Jacob Benesty, Bell Labs, Lucent
Technologies, United States
AUDIO-L1.5: ACOUSTIC ECHO CANCELLATION USING NONLINEAR CASCADE FILTERS V - 389
Jean-Pierre Costa, Axel Lagrange, Aurelie Arliaud, University ofAvignon, France
AUDIO-L1.6: A SOFT-PARTITIONED FREQUENCY-DOMAIN ADAPTIVE FILTERFOR V - 393
ACOUSTIC ECHO CANCELLATION
Gerald Enzner, Peter Vary, Aachen University (RWTH), Germany
AUDIO-L2: BROADBAND AND PERCEPTUAL CODING I
AUDIO-L2.1: ANONUNIFORM MODULATION TRANSFORM FORAUDIO CODING WITH V - 397
INCREASED TIME RESOLUTION
Jeffrey Thompson, Les Atlas, University ofWashington, United States
Ixxviii
AUDIO-L2.2: A PERCEPTUAL SUBSPACE METHOD FORSINUSOIDAL SPEECH AND V - 401
AUDIO MODELING
Jesper Jensen, Richard Heusdens, Delft University ofTechnology, Netherlands; Soren Holdt Jensen, Aalborg University,Denmark
AUDIO-L2.3: EFFICffiNT BIT ASSIGNMENT STRATEGY FORPERCEPTUAL AUDIO V - 405
CODING
Cheng-Han Yang, Hsueh-Ming Hang, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan
AUDIO-L2.4: HIERARCHICALLOSSLESS AUDIO CODING IN TERMS OF SAMPLING RATE V - 409
AND AMPLITUDE RESOLUTION
Takehiro Moriya, Akio Jin, Takeshi Mori, Kazunaga Ikeda, Takao Kaneko, NTT Cyber Space Labs., Japan
AUDIO-L2.5: A PROGRESSIVE TO LOSSLESS EMBEDDED AUDIO CODER (PLEAC) WITH V - 413
REVERSIBLE MODULATED LAPPED TRANSFORM
Jin Li, Microsoft Research, United States
AUDIO-L2.6: A BITSTREAM SCALABLEAUDIO CODERUSING A HYBRID WLPC-WAVELET V - 417
REPRESENTATION
DarylNing, Mohamed Deriche, Queensland University ofTechnology, Australia
AUDIO-L3: APPLICATIONS TO MUSIC
AUDIO-L3.1: MUSICAL INSTRUMENT IDENTIFICATION BASED ON FO-DEPENDENT V - 421
MULTIVARIATE NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
Tetsuro Kitahara, Kyoto University, Japan; Masataka Goto, National Institute ofAdvanced Insdustrial Science and
Technology, Japan; Hiroshi G. Okuno, Kyoto University, Japan
AUDIO-L3.2: A PERCEPTUALLY BALANCED LOSS FUNCTION FOR SHORT-TIME V - 425
SPECTRAL AMPLITUDE ESTIMATION
Patrick J. Wolfe, Simon J. Godsill, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
AUDIO-L3.3: MUSICAL GENRE CLASSIFICATION USING SUPPORT VECTOR MACHINES V - 429
Changsheng Xu, Namunu Maddage, Xi Shao, Fang Cao, Qi Tian, Laboratoriesfor Information Technology, Singapore
AUDIO-L3.4: COMPILATION OF UNIFIED PHYSICAL MODELS FOR EFFICIENT SOUND V - 433
SYNTHESIS
Matti Karjalainen, Cumhur Erkut, Lauri Savioja, Helsinki University ofTechnology, Finland
AUDIO-L3.5: A CHORUS-SECTION DETECTING METHOD FOR MUSICAL AUDIO V - 437
SIGNALS
Masataka Goto, National Institute ofAdvanced Insdustrial Science and Technology, Japan
AUDIO-L3.6: PHASE-BASED NOTE ONSET DETECTION FOR MUSIC SIGNALS V - 441
Juan Bello, Mark Sandler, Queen Mary, University ofLondon, United Kingdom
AUDIO-L4: BROADBAND AND PERCEPTUAL CODING II
AUDIO-L4.1: FINE GRAIN SCALABLE PERCEPTUAL AND LOSSLESS AUDIO CODING V - 445
BASED ON INTMDCT
RalfGeiger, Fraunhofer AEMT, Germany; Jtirgen Herre, Fraunhofer 1IS-A, Germany; Gerald Schuller, Thomas Sporer,
Fraunhofer AEMT, Germany
AUDIO-L4.2: FLEXIBLE FREQUENCY DECOMPOSITIONS FOR COSINE-MODULATED V - 449
FILTER BANKS
OmarNiamut, Richard Heusdens, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
AUDIO-L4.3: ON PSYCHOACOUSTIC NOISE SHAPING FORAUDIO REQUANTIZATION V - 453
Dreten De Koning, Werner Verhelst, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
AUDIO-L4.4: TOWARDS A NEW PERCEPTUAL CODING PARADIGM FOR AUDIO SIGNALS V - 457
Ricky Der, Peter Kabal, McGill University, Canada; Wai-Yip Chan, Queen's University, Canada
Ixxix
AUDIO-L4.5: IMPROVEDLOW BIT-RATE AUDIO COMPRESSION USING REDUCED V - 461
RANKICA INSTEAD OF PSYCHOACOUSTIC MODELING
Adiel Ben-Shalom, Michael Werman, Hebrew University ofJerusalem, Israel; Shlomo Dubnov, Ben-Gurion University,Israel
AUDIO-L4.6: EFFICIENT SCALABLE CODING OF STEREOPHONIC AUDIO BY V - 465
CONDITIONAL QUANTIZATIONANDESTIMATION-THEORETIC PREDICTIONAshish Aggarwal, Sang-Uk Ryu, Kenneth Rose, University of California, Santa Barbara, United States
AUDIO-PI: LOUDSPEAKER AND MICROPHONE ARRAY SIGNAL PROCESSING
AUDIO-P1.1: ROBUST REAL-TIME BLIND SOURCESEPARATION FORMOVING V - 469
SPEAKERS IN A ROOM
Ryo Mukai, Hiroshi Sawada, Shoko Araki, Shoji Makino, NTT Corporation, Japan
AUDIO-P1.2: DESIGN OF BROADBAND SPEECH BEAMFORMERS ROBUST AGAINST V - 473
ERRORS IN THE MICROPHONE ARRAY CHARACTERISTICS
Simon Doclo, Marc Moonen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
AUDIO-P1.3: A REAL-TIME AUDITORY-BASED MICROPHONE ARRAY ASSESSED WITH V - 477
E-RASTI EVALUATIONPROPOSAL
Jose-Luis Sdnchez-Bote, Joaquin Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Javier Ortega-Garcia, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain
AUDIO-P1.4: ROBUST TIME DELAY ESTIMATION EXPLOITING SPATIAL CORRELATION V - 481
Jingdong Chen, Jacob Benesty, Yiteng (Arden) Huang, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, United States
AUDIO-P1.5: ESTIMATION OF THE NUMBER OF SOUND SOURCES USING SUPPORT V - 485
VECTOR MACHINES AND ITS APPLICATION TO SOUND SOURCESEPARATION
Kiyoshi Yamamoto, University ofTsukuba, Japan; Futoshi Asano, AIST, Japan; Willem van Rooijen, Universiteit Leiden,
Netherlands; Eric Ling, AIST, Japan; Takeshi Yamada, Nobuhiko Kitawaki, University ofTsukuba, Japan
AUDIO-P1.6: SPEECH ENHANCEMENT USING MULTIPLE SOFT CONSTRAINED V - 489
BEAMFORMERS AND NON-COHERENT TECHNIQUE
Slow Yong Low, University of Western Australia, Australia; Nedelko Grbic, Sven Nordholm, University of WesternAustralia, Australia
AUDIO-P1.7: ROBUST INTERFERENCE SUPPRESSION AND BLIND SPEECH V - 493
BEAMFORMING IN ROOM REVERBERANT ENVIRONMENTS
Wing-Kin Ma, Pak Chung Ching, Chinese University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR of China
AUDIO-P1.8: MICROPHONEARRAY SPEECH RECOGNITION: EXPERIMENTS ON V - 497
OVERLAPPING SPEECH IN MEETINGS
Darren Moore, Iain McCowan, IDIAP, Switzerland
AUDIO-P1.9: THE IMPACT OF SPEECH DETECTION ERRORS ON THENOISE V - 501
REDUCTION PERFORMANCE OF MULTI-CHANNEL WIENER FILTERING
Ann Spriet, Marc Moonen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, ESAT-SCD/SISTA, Belgium; Jan Wouters, Katholieke
Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
AUDIO-P1.10: INTERFACE FOR BARGE-IN FREE SPOKEN DIALOGUESYSTEM BASED V - 505
ON SOUND FIELD CONTROL AND MICROPHONE ARRAY
Yoichi Hinamoto, Kouichi Mino, Hiroshi Saruwatari, Kiyohiro Shikano, Nara Institute ofScience and Technology, Japan
AUDIO-P1.11: SUBBAND BASED BLIND SOURCE SEPARATION FOR CONVOLUTIVE V - 509
MIXTURES OF SPEECH
Shoko Araki, Shoji Makino, NTT Corporation, Japan; Robert Aichner, Universitdt Erlangen-Numberg, Germany; TsuyokiNishikawa, Hiroshi Saruwatari, Nara Institute ofScience and Technology, Japan
AUDIO-P1.12: FAST CONVOLUTIVE BLIND SPEECH SEPARATIONVIA SUBBAND V - 513
ADAPTATION
Francois Duplessis-Beaulieu, Benoit Champagne, McGill University, Canada
Ixxx
AUDIO-P2: APPLICATIONS TO MUSIC, AUDITORY MODELING, AND HEARINGAIDS
AUDIO-P2.1: PITCH AND TIMBRE MANIPULATIONS USING CORTICAL V - 517
REPRESENTATION OFSOUND
Dmitry N. Zotkin, Shihab A. Shamma, Powen Ru, Ramani Duraiswami, Larry S. Davis, University ofMaryland, CollegePark, United States
AUDIO-P2.2: A BAYES-RULE BASED HIERARCHICAL SYSTEM FOR BINAURAL SOUND V - 521
SOURCE LOCALIZATION
Danfeng Li, Stephen Levinson, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign, United States
AUDIO-P2.3: SPEECHSEGREGATION USINGEVENT SYNCHRONOUS AUDITORY V - 525
VOCODER
Toshio Irino, Wakayama University, Japan; Roy Patterson, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; Hideki Kawahara,
Wakayama University, Japan
AUDIO-P2.4: AUDIO-BASED CONTEXT AWARENESS - ACOUSTIC MODELING AND V - 529
PERCEPTUAL EVALUATION
Antti Eronen, Juha Tuomi, Anssi Klapuri, Tampere University of Technology, Finland; Seppo Fagerlund, Timo Sorsa,
Gaetan Lorho, Jyri Huopaniemi, Nokia Research Center, Finland
AUDIO-P2.5: A LINEAR HIDDEN MARKOV MODEL FORMUSIC INFORMATION V - 533
RETRIEVAL BASED ON HUMMING
Baolong Liu, Yadong Wu, Yang Li, Shanghai Jiaotong University, China
AUDIO-P2.6: INSTANTANEOUS FREQUENCY AND AMPLITUDE OF VIBRATO IN SINGING V - 537
VOICE
Ixone Arroabarren, Miroslav Zivanovic, Universidad Publica de Navarra, Spain; Xavier Rodet, 1RCAM, France; AlfonsoCarlosena, UniversidadPublica de Navarra, Spain
AUDIO-P2.7: MULTIDIMENSIONAL HUMMING TRANSCRIPTION USING A STATISTICAL V - 541
APPROACH FOR QUERY BY HUMMING SYSTEMS
Hsuan-Huei Shih, Shrikanth S. Narayanan, C.-C. Jay Kuo, University ofSouthern California, United States
AUDIO-P2.8: AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION OF BIRD SPECIES BASED ON SINUSOIDAL V - 545
MODELING OF SYLLABLES
Aki Harma, Helsinki University ofTechnology, Finland
AUDIO-P2.9: STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS OF MUSICAL SIGNALS VIA PATTERN MATCHING V - 549
Wei Chai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States
AUDIO-P2.10: A MISSING FEATUREAPPROACH TO INSTRUMENT IDENTIFICATION IN V - 553
POLYPHONIC MUSIC
Jana Eggink, Guy J. Brown, University ofSheffield, United Kingdom
AUDIO-P2.il: APPLICATION OF PITCH TRACKINGTO SOUTH INDIAN CLASSICAL MUSIC V - 557
Arvindh Krishnaswamy, Stanford University, United States
AUDIO-P2.12: DIRECT ESTIMATIONOF MUSICAL PITCH CONTOURFROM AUDIO DATA V - 561
Adriane Durey, Mark Clements, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
AUDI0-P3: ECHO CANCELLATION AND ACTIVE NOISE CONTROL
AUDIO-P3.1: ANEWADAPTIVE IIR ALGORITHMFORACTIVE NOISE CONTROL V - 565
Jing Lu, Xiaojun Qiu, Boling Xu, Nanjing University, China
AUDIO-P3.2: PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF THEUNCONSTRAINED FXLMSALGORITHM V - 569
FORACTIVENOISE CONTROL
Yu Gong, Ying Song, Senjin Liu, Laboratoriesfor Information Technology, Singapore
AUDIO-P3.3: A NEWVARIABLE STEP SIZE LMS ALGORITHM WITH APPLICATIONTO V - 573
ACTIVE NOISE CONTROL
Yue Wang, Chun Zhang, Zhihua Wang, Tsinghua University, China
£«nUifV^(
AUDIO-P3.4: CONVERGENCE ANALYSIS OF MULTICHANNEL ANC SYSTEM USING V - 576
FXLMS ALGORITHM WITH INEXACT SECONDARY PATHMODEL
Tak Keung Yeung, Sze Fong Yau, Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology, China
AUDIO-P3.5: ACTIVENOISE CONTROLWITHOUT A SECONDARY PATH MODEL BY V - 580
USING A FREQUENCY-DOMAIN SIMULTANEOUS PERTURBATIONMETHOD WITH
VARIABLE PERTURBATION
Yoshinobu Kajikawa, Yasuo Nomura, Kansai University, Japan
AUDIO-P3.6: MULTI-MICROPHONE RESIDUAL ECHO ESTIMATION V - 584
Markus Kallinger, Karl-Dirk Kammeyer, University ofBremen, Germany; Joerg Bitzer, Houpert Digital Audio, Germany
AUDIO-P3.7: A NEW NON-LINEAR PROCESSOR (NLP) FORBACKGROUND V - 588
CONTINUITY IN ECHO CONTROL
Oguz Tanrikulu, Tellabs, United States; Kutluyil Dogancay, University ofSouth Australia, Australia
AUDIO-P3.8: A METHOD OF COHERENCE-BASED STEP-SIZE CONTROL FOR ROBUST V - 592
STEREO ECHO CANCELLATION
Satoru Emura, Yoichi Haneda, NTT Corporation, Japan
AUDIO-P3.9: AN IMPROVED METHOD FORSTEREO ACOUSTIC ECHO CANCELATION V - 596
Maximilian Gauger, TU Darmstadt, Germany
AUDIO-P3.10: NONLINEAR ECHO CANCELLATION USING A CORRELATION LMS V - 600
ADAPTATION SCHEME
Dong-0 Hwang, Sang-Won Nam, Hong-Won Park, Hanyang University, Republic ofKorea
AUDIO-P3.il: SUBBAND DOUBLETALKDETECTORFOR ACOUSTIC ECHO V - 604
CANCELLATIONSYSTEMS
Jia Tao, Peking University, China; Jia Ying, Jian Li, Yongge Hu, Intel China Research Center, China
AUDIO-P3.12: OPTIMAL NON-LINEAR PROCESSOR CONTROL FOR RESIDUAL-ECHO V - 608
SUPPRESSION
Milos Doroslovacki, George Washington University, United States
AUDIO-P4: MULTIMEDIA, SPATIAL, MULTICHANNEL, AND NETWORK AUDIO
AUDIO-P4.1: THREE-DIMENSIONAL ELLIPTIC FOURIERMETHODSFORTHE V - 612
PARAMETERIZATION OFHUMANPINNA SHAPE
Carl Hetherington, Anthony Tew, Yufei Tao, University ofYork, United Kingdom
AUDIO-P4.2: THE PLENACOUSTIC FUNCTION, SAMPLING AND RECONSTRUCTION V - 616
Thibaut Ajdler, Martin Vetterli, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), Switzerland
AUDIO-P4.3: AUDIO AND VIDEO COMBINED FOR HOMEVIDEO ABSTRATION V - 620
Ming Zhao, Jiajun Bu, Chun Chen, Zhejiang University, China
AUDIO-P4.4: SCALABLE TO LOSSLESS AUDIO COMPRESSION BASED ON PERCEPTUAL V - 624
SET PARTITIONINGIN HIERARCHICAL TREES (PSPIHT)Mohammed Raad, Alfred Mertins, Ian Burnett, University Of Wollongong, Australia
AUDIO-P4.5: COMPARING MFCC AND MPEG-7 AUDIO FEATURES FORFEATURE V - 628
EXTRACTION, MAXIMUM LIKELIHOOD HMM AND ENTROPIC PRIOR HMM FOR
SPORTS AUDIO CLASSD7ICATION
Ziyou Xiong, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign, United States; Regunathan Radhakrishnan, Ajay Divakaran,
Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, United States; Thomas Huang, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign,United States
AUDIO-P4.6: AUDIO EVENTS DETECTION BASED HIGHLIGHTS EXTRACTION FROM V - 632
BASEBALL, GOLF AND SOCCER GAMES IN A UNIFIED FRAMEWORK
Ziyou Xiong, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign, United States; Regunathan Radhakrishnan, Ajay Divakaran,
Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, United States; Thomas Huang, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign,United States
Ixxxii
AUDIO-P4.7: AUDIORESTORATION BY CONSTRAINED AUDIO TEXTURE SYNTHESIS V - 636
Lie Lu, Microsoft Research Asia, China; Yi Mao, Zhejiang University, China; Liu Wenyin, City University ofHong Kong,Hong Kong SAR of China; Hong-Jiang Zhang, Microsoft ResearchAsia, China
AUDIO-P4.8: HARMONICITYANDDYNAMICS BASED AUDIO SEPARATION V - 640
S. H. Srinivasan, Mohan Kankanhalli, National University of Singapore, Singapore
AUDIO-P4.9: WEIGHT UPDATING FORRELEVANCE FEEDBACKIN AUDIO RETRIEVAL V - 644
Mingchun Liu, Chunru Wan, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
AUDIO-P4.10: SOUND TEXTURE MODELLINGWITH LINEAR PREDICTION IN BOTH V - 648
TIME ANDFREQUENCY DOMAINS
Marios Athineos, Dan Ellis, Columbia University, United States
AUDIO-P4.il: PARAMETRIC VECTORQUANTIZATION FOR CODING PERCUSSIVE V - 652
SOUNDS IN MUSIC
Ye Wang, National University ofSingapore, Singapore; Jian Tang, Ali Ahmaniemi, Nokia Research Center, Finland;
Markus Vaalgamaa, Nokia Mobile Phones, Finland
AUDIO-P4.12: NONSTATIONARY SINUSOIDALMODELING WITH EFFICIENT V - 656
ESTIMATION OF LINEARFREQUENCY CHIRP PARAMETERS
Aaron Master, Yi-Wen Liu, Stanford University, United States
MMEDIA-L1: MULTIMEDIA SECURITY
MMEDIA-L1.1: WATERMARKING PARAMETRIC REPRESENTATIONS FOR SYNTHETIC V - 660
AUDIO
Yi-Wen Liu, Julius O. Smith, Stanford University, United States
MMEDIA-L1.2: NONLINEARCOLLUSION ATTACKS ON INDEPENDENT FINGERPRINTS V - 664
FORMULTIMEDIA
Hong Zhao, Min Wu, Z. Jane Wang, K. J. Ray Liu, University ofMaryland, United States
MMEDIA-L1.3: FREQUENCY-SELECTIVE PARTIAL ENCRYPTION OF COMPRESSED V - 668
AUDIO
Antonio Servetti, Cristiano Testa, Politecnico di Torino, Italy; Juan Carlos De Martin, IEIIT-CNR, Politecnico di Torino,
Italy
MMEDIA-L1.4: OPTIMIZATION STRATEGIES FOR QUANTIZATION WATERMARKING V - 672
WITH APPLICATION TO IMAGE AUTHENTICATION
Guixing Wu, En-hui Yang, Wei Sun, University of Waterloo, Canada
MMEDIA-L1.5: WATERMARKING OF 3D MODELS USING PRINCIPAL COMPONENT V - 676
ANALYSIS
Andreas Kalivas, Anastasios Tefas, Ioannis Pitas, Aristotle University ofThessaloniki, Greece
MMEDIA-L1.6: A HYBRID CONSTRAINED UNEQUAL ERROR PROTECTION AND DATA V - 680
HIDINGSCHEME FOR PACKET VIDEO TRANSMISSION
Chowdary Adsumilli, Mylene Farias, University of California, Santa Barbara, United States; Marco Carli, University of
ROMETRE, Italy; Sanjit Mitra, University ofCalifornia, Santa Barbara, UnitedStates
MMEDIA-L2: MULTIMEDIA COMMUNICATION AND NETWORKING
MMEDIA-L2.1: ANALYSIS OFPACKETLOSS FOR COMPRESSED VIDEO: DOES V - 684
BURST-LENGTH MATTER?
Yi Liang, Stanford University, United States; John Apostolopoulos, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, United States; Bernd
Girod, Stanford University, United States
MMEDIA-L2.2: FINE-GRAINED RATESHAPING FORVIDEO STREAMING OVER V - 688
WIRELESS NETWORKS
Trista Chen, Tsuhan Chen, Carnegie Mellon University, United States
Ixxxiii
MMEDIA-L2.3: A SCHEDULED BROADCASTING PROTOCOLFOR EFFICIENT VIDEO ON V - 692
DEMAND
Yeonjoon Chung, Ahmed Tewfk, University of Minnesota, United States
MMEDIA-L2.4: EMBEDDED IMAGE TRANSMISSION BASED ON ADAPTIVE MODULATION V - 696
AND CONSTRAINED RETRANSMISSION OVER BLOCK FADING CHANNELS
Kewu Peng, John Kieffer, Qingwen Liu, Shengli Zhou, University ofMinnesota, United States
MMEDIA-L2.5: A SPATIAL-DOMAIN ERROR CONCEALMENT METHOD WITH EDGE V - 700
RECOVERY AND SELECTIVE DIRECTIONALINTERPOLATION
Wei-Ying Kung, Chang-Su Kim, C.-C. Jay Kuo, University of Southern California, United States
MMEDIA-L2.6: COMPRESSION AND TRANSMISSION OF FACIALIMAGES OVER VERY V - 704
NARROWBAND WIRELESS CHANNELS
Aysegul Gunduz, Hamid Krim, North Carolina State University, United States; P. Allan Sadowski, North Carolina State
Highway Patrol, United States
MMEDIA-L3: HUMAN-MACHINE INTERFACE AND PERCEPTION
MMEDIA-L3.1: NON-AUDIBLEMURMUR RECOGNITION INPUT INTERFACE USING V - 708
STETHOSCOPIC MICROPHONEATTACHED TO THE SKIN
Yoshitaka Nakajima, Hideki Kashioka, Kiyohiro Shikano, Nick Campbell, Nara Institute ofScience and Technology, Japan
MMEDIA-L3.2: AUDIO-VISUAL SPEAKER RECOGNITION USING TIME-VARYING STREAM V - 712
RELIABILITY PREDICTION
Upendra Chaudhari, Ganesh Ramaswamy, Gerasimos Potamianos, Chalapathy Neti, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center,
United States
MMEDIA-L3.3: NOISE RESISTANT AUDIO-VISUAL VERIFICATION VIA STRUCTURAL V - 716
CONSTRAINTS
Conrad Sanderson, IDIAP, Switzerland; Kuldip Paliwal, Griffith University, Australia
MMEDIA-L3.4: USING VISEME BASED ACOUSTIC MODELSFOR SPEECH DRIVEN LIP V - 720
SYNTHESIS
Ashish Verma, Nitendra Rajput, Venkat Subramaniam, Indian Institute of Technology, India
MMEDIA-L3.5: MULTIMEDIAFUSION IN AUTOMATIC EXTRACTION OFSTUDIO V - 724
SPEECH SEGMENTS FOR SPOKEN DOCUMENT RETRIEVAL
Pui Yu Hid, Wai Kit Lo, Helen M. Meng, Chinese University ofHong Kong, Hong Kong SAR of China
MMEDIA-L3.6: EDITING BY VOICE AND THE ROLE OF SEQUENTIAL SYMBOL V - 728
SYSTEMS FORIMPROVED HUMAN-TO-COMPUTERINFORMATION RATES
Nils Klarlund, AT&T Labs - Research, United States
MMEDIA-P1: SIGNAL PROCESSING FOR MEDIA INTEGRATION
MMEDIA-Pl.l: ADAPTIVE MULTIPLE DESCRIPTION CODING FOR INTERNET VIDEO V - 732
Osama Lotfallah, Sethuraman Panchanathan, Arizona State University, United States
MMEDIA-P1.2: EMBEDDED MULTDPLE DESCRIPTION SCALAR QUANTIZERS FOR V - 736
PROGRESSIVE IMAGE TRANSMISSION
Augustin Ion Gavrilescu, Adrian Munteanu, Peter Schelkens, Jan Cornells, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
MMEDIA-P1.3: SCHEMES FOR ERRORRESILIENT STREAMING OF PERCEPTUALLY V - 740
CODED AUDIO
Jari Korhonen, Nokia Research Center, Finland; Ye Wang, National University ofSingapore, Singapore
MMEDIA-P1.4: OPTIMAL QOS MAPPING FOR STREAMING VIDEO OVER V - 744
DIFFERENTIATED SERVICES NETWORKS
Fei Zhang, Mark Pickering, Michael Frater, John Arnold, University College ADFA, University ofNSW, Australia
Ixxxiv
MMEDIA-P1.5: SPATIO-TEMPORAL VIDEO ERROR CONCEALMENT WITH V - 748
PERCEPTUALLY OPTIMIZED MODESELECTION
Stefano Belfiore, Marco Grangetto, Enrico Magli, Gabriella Olmo, Politecnico di Torino, Italy
MMEDIA-P1.6: LAYERED FGS VIDEO OVERACTIVE NETWORK WITH SELECTIVE V - 752
DROP AND ADAPTIVE RATE CONTROL
Hsu-Feng Hsiao, Jenq-Neng Hwang, University of Washington, United States
MMEDIA-P1.7: SLIDING-WINDOW PACKETIZATIONFOR FORWARD ERROR V - 756
CORRECTION BASED MULTD7LE DESCRIPTION TRANSCODING
Tong Gan, Kai-Kuang Ma, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
MMEDIA-P1.8: IMPROVED TECHNIQUES FOR DUAL-BITSTREAM MPEG VIDEO V - 760
STREAMING WITH VCRFUNCTIONALITIES
Shih-Yu Huang, Ming Chuan University, Taiwan
MMEDIA-P1.9: EVALUATION OF JOINT SOURCE AND CHANNEL CODING OVER V - 764
WIRELESS NETWORKS
Yuxin Liu, Purdue University, United States; Christine Podilchuk, Bell Labs, Lucent Technologies, United States; Edward
J. Delp, Purdue University, United States
MMEDIA-P1.10: APPLICATION LEVEL SELECTIVE DROPFOR LAYERED VIDEO OVER V - 768
MULTICAST NETWORKS
Qiang Liu, Jenq-Neng Hwang, University of Washington, United States
MMEDIA-Pl.il: AUDIO-VISUAL SYNCHRONY FOR DETECTION OF MONOLOGUESIN V - 772
VIDEO ARCHIVES
Giridharan Iyengar, Harriet Nock, Chalapathy Neti, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, United States
MMEDIA-P1.12: WHY TAKENOTES? USETHE WHITEBOARD CAPTURESYSTEM V - 776
Li-wei He, Zicheng Liu, Zhengyou Zhang, Microsoft Research, United States
MMEDIA-P2: MULTIMEDIA APPLICATIONS
MMEDIA-P2.1: AN AUDIO-VISUAL APPROACH TO SIMULTANEOUS-SPEAKER SPEECH V - 780
RECOGNITION
Eric Patterson, University ofNorth Carolina, Wilmington, United States; John Gowdy, Clemson University, United States
MMEDIA-P2.2: A MULTIMODAL LEARNING INTERFACE FOR WORD ACQUISITION V - 784
Dana Ballard, ChenYu, University ofRochester, United States
MMEDIA-P2.3: ENVIRONMENT-ADAPTIVE MULTI-CHANNEL BIOMETRICS V - 788
Stephen M. Chu, Minerva Yeung, Luhong Liang, Xiaoxing Liu, Intel Corporation, United States
MMEDIA-P2.4: OSCILLATORY GESTURES AND DISCOURSE V -792
Francis Quek, Yingen Xiong, Wright State University, United States
MMEDIA-P2.5: A FAST SEARCH ALGORITHM FOR BACKGROUND MUSIC SIGNALS BASED V - 796
ON THE SEARCH FOR NUMEROUS SMALL SIGNAL COMPONENTS
Hidehisa Nagano, Kunio Kashino, Hiroshi Murase, NTT Corporation, Japan
MMEDIA-P2.6: NEAR-VIDEOREALISTIC SYNTHETIC VISUAL SPEECHUSING V - 800
NON-RIGID APPEARANCE MODELS
Barry-John Theobald, Gavin Cawley, University ofEast Anglia, United Kingdom; Iain Matthews, Carnegie Mellon
University, United States; Andrew Bangham, University ofEastAnglia, United Kingdom
MMEDIA-P2.7: ROBUST CORNER TRACKING FOR UNCONSTRAINEDMOTION V - 804
Farahnaz Mohanna, University ofSurrey, United Kingdom; Farzin Mokhtarian, University ofSurrey, United Kingdom
MMEDIA-P2.8: COLLABORATIVE KNOWLEDGEBASE AND ITS APPLICATION IN ADAPTIVE V - 808
MESSAGE FILTERING FOR COLLABORATIVE VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENT
Chen Ling, Chen Gencai, Zhejiang university, China
MMEDIA-P2.9: AUDIOVISUAL-BASED ADAPTIVE SPEAKER IDENTIFICATION V - 812
Ying Li, Shrikanth S. Narayanan, C.-C. Jay Kuo, University ofSouthern California, United States
Ixxxv
MMEDIA-P2.10: CORRELATIVE EXPLORATION OF EEG SIGNALS FOR DIRECT V - 816
BRAIN-COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
Gary Garcia, Touradj Ebrahimi, Jean-Marc Vesin, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), Switzerland
MMEDIA-P2.il: A SEMANTICNETWORKMODELING FOR UNDERSTANDING BASEBALL V - 820
VIDEO
Huang-Chia Shih, Chung-Lin Huang, National Tsing-Hua University, Taiwan
Volume VI
SPTM-Ll: FILTER DESIGN
SPTM-L1.1: OPTIMALFIR FILTERS WITH ALMOST LINEARPHASE VI -1
Daniel Seidner, Creo IL Ltd., Israel
SPTM-L1.2: A DESIGN METHOD OF MINIMUM PHASE FIR FILTERS WITH COMPLEX VI - 5
COEFFICIENTS
Yasunori Sugita, Naoyuki Aikawa, Nihon University, Japan
SPTM-L1.3: A WEIGHTED L_2 BASED METHOD FORTHEDESIGN OF ARBITRARY VI - 9
ONEDIMENSIONAL FIR DIGITAL FILTERS
Emmanouil Psarakis, University ofPatras, Greece
SPTM-L1.4: DESIGN OFROBUST IIR MAGNITUDEFILTERS VIA SEMIDEFINITE VI -13
PROGRAMMING
Yonghong Liu, Zhi-Quan Luo, McMaster University, Canada
SPTM-L1.5: LINEAR PHASE EQUIPJPPLE IIR DIGITAL FILTER DESIGN VI -17
H. K. Kwan, University of Windsor, Canada
SPTM-L1.6: EQUIVALENCE BETWEEN THE EXTENDED WINDOW DESIGN OF IIR VI - 21
FILTERS AND LEAST SQUARES FREQUENCY DOMAINDESIGNS
Grigore Braileanu, Gonzaga University, United States
SPTM-L2: SYSTEM MODELING AND REPRESENTATION
SPTM-L2.1: RATE-LIMITED EAFRP: A NEWIMPROVED MODELFOR HIGH-SPEED VI - 25
NETWORK TRAFFIC
Jie Yu, Athina Petropulu, Harish Sethu, Drexel University, United States
SPTM-L2.2: A DIFFERENTIAL ENTROPY BASED METHOD FOR DETERMINING THE VI - 29
OPTIMAL EMBEDDING PARAMETERS OF A SIGNAL
Temujin Gautama, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium; Danilo Mandic, Imperial College ofScience, Technology and
Medicine, United Kingdom; Marc Van Hulle, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
SPTM-L2.3: BAYESIAN NETWORKLOSS INFERENCE VI - 33
Dong Guo, Xiaodong Wang, Columbia University, United States
SPTM-L2.4: THE IMPACT OF THE FLOW ARRIVALPROCESS IN INTERNET TRAFFIC VI - 37
Nicolas Hohn, Darryl Veitch, University ofMelbourne, Australia; Patrice Abry, Ecole Normale Superieure deLyon, France
SPTM-L2.5: MODELING CELLULAR SIGNAL PROCESSING USING INTERACTING VI - 41MARKOV CHAINS
MayaR. Said, Alan V. Oppenheim, Douglas A. Lauffenburger, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States
SPTM-L2.6: CHARACTERIZATION OF A SET OF INVERTIBLE LPTV FILTERS USING VI - 45
CIRCULANT MATRICES
Wilfried Chauvet, Bernard Lacaze, Daniel Roviras, ENSEEIHT/IRIT/TESA, France; Alban Duverdier, CNES, France
Ixxxvi