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Pre-announcement
3rd Clarity Prediction Challenge (CPC-3)
Launch Date: March 17th, 2025
Workshop: 22nd August 2025, an INTERSPEECH satellite workshop (TBC)
https://claritychallenge.org/
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Dear colleague,
It gives us great pleasure to pre-announce the 3rd Clarity Speech Separation and Recognition Challenge (CHiME-9) that will launch in March 2025.
The Challenge
To develop better hearing enhancement technologies, including hearing aids and hearable devices,
we need reliable methods to automatically evaluate the speech intelligibility of audio signals. This requires a predictive model that takes as input both the
audio produced by a hearing aid and listener characteristics (e.g., their
audiogram) and estimates
the speech intelligibility score that the listener would achieve in a listening test.
In recent years, we have run the CPC1
Challenge and CPC2
Challenge to advance such models. We are now launching the third round of this challenge, which builds on previous efforts by incorporating a larger and more diverse set of listener data for training and evaluation.
What will be provided
For further details see https://claritychallenge.org/docs/cpc3/cpc3_intro
The Workshop
The results of the new challenge will be showcased at an
ISCA workshop,
a satellite event to Interspeech 2025 in Rotterdam on 22nd August 2025 (TBC).
For further details see https://claritychallenge.org/clarity2025-workshop/
Registering and submitting
Following the launch on March 17th, we will open registration for prospective entrants. Participants will have until 31st July to submit their entries, which will be evaluated remotely by the organizers. Full submission instructions will be provided at launch.
Important Dates
All dates are to be intended anywhere on earth time (AoE).
Stay informed
To stay informed please sign up to the
Clarity Challenge Google group
Organisers
Michael A. Akeroyd, University of Nottingham
Jon Barker, University of Sheffield
Trevor J. Cox, University of Salford
John F. Culling, Cardiff University
Jennifer Firth, University of Nottingham
Simone Graetzer, University of Salford
Graham Naylor, University of Nottingham
Funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), UK
Supported by RNID (formerly Action on Hearing Loss), Hearing Industry Research Consortium, Amazon TTS Research
Trevor Cox
Professor of Acoustic Engineering Newton Building, University of Salford, Salford M5 4WT, UK. Mobile: 07986 557419 www.acoustics.salford.ac.uk @trevor_cox |