Evaluating Parkinson's Disease Detection in Anonymized Speech: A Performance and Acoustic Analysis

Abstract

Automatic detection of Parkinson's disease (PD) from speech is a promising non-invasive diagnostic tool, but it raises significant privacy concerns. Speaker anonymization mitigates these risks, but it may suppress the pathological information necessary for PD detection. We assess the trade-off between privacy and PD detection for two anonymizers (STT-TTS and kNN-VC) using two Spanish datasets. STT-TTS provides better privacy but severely degrades PD detection by eradicating prosodic information. kNN-VC preserves macro-prosodic features such as duration and F0 contours, achieving F1 scores only 3-7\% lower than original baselines, demonstrating that privacy-preserving PD detection is viable when using appropriate anonymization. Finally, an acoustic distortion analysis characterizes specific weaknesses in kNN-VC, offering insights for designing anonymizers that better preserve PD information.

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