Asymmetric Encoder-Decoder Based on Time-Frequency Correlation for Speech Separation

Abstract

Speech separation in realistic acoustic environments remains challenging because overlapping speakers, background noise, and reverberation must be resolved simultaneously. Although recent time-frequency (TF) domain models have shown strong performance, most still rely on late-split architectures, where speaker disentanglement is deferred to the final stage, creating an information bottleneck and weakening discriminability under adverse conditions. To address this issue, we propose SR-CorrNet, an asymmetric encoder-decoder framework that introduces the separation-reconstruction (SepRe) strategy into a TF dual-path backbone. The encoder performs coarse separation from mixture observations, while the weight-shared decoder progressively reconstructs speaker-discriminative features with cross-speaker interaction, enabling stage-wise refinement. To complement this architecture, we formulate speech separation as a structured correlation-to-filter problem: spatio-spectro-temporal correlations computed from the observations are used as input features, and the corresponding deep filters are estimated to recover target signals. We further incorporate an attractor-based dynamic split module to adapt the number of output streams to the actual speaker configuration. Experimental results on WSJ0-2,3,4,5Mix, WHAMR!, and LibriCSS demonstrate consistent improvements across anechoic, noisy-reverberant, and real-recorded conditions in both single- and multi-channel settings, highlighting the effectiveness of TF-domain SepRe with correlation-based filter estimation for speech separation.

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