Caution

You're reading an old version of this documentation. If you want up-to-date information, please have a look at 0.9.1.

Laplacian segmentation

This notebook implements the laplacian segmentation method of McFee and Ellis, 2014, with a couple of minor stability improvements.

Throughout the example, we will refer to equations in the paper by number, so it will be helpful to read along.

# Code source: Brian McFee
# License: ISC
Imports
  • numpy for basic functionality

  • scipy for graph Laplacian

  • matplotlib for visualization

  • sklearn.cluster for K-Means

import numpy as np
import scipy
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

import sklearn.cluster

import librosa
import librosa.display

First, we’ll load in a song

y, sr = librosa.load(librosa.ex('fishin'))

Next, we’ll compute and plot a log-power CQT

BINS_PER_OCTAVE = 12 * 3
N_OCTAVES = 7
C = librosa.amplitude_to_db(np.abs(librosa.cqt(y=y, sr=sr,
                                        bins_per_octave=BINS_PER_OCTAVE,
                                        n_bins=N_OCTAVES * BINS_PER_OCTAVE)),
                            ref=np.max)

fig, ax = plt.subplots()
librosa.display.specshow(C, y_axis='cqt_hz', sr=sr,
                         bins_per_octave=BINS_PER_OCTAVE,
                         x_axis='time', ax=ax)
plot segmentation

To reduce dimensionality, we’ll beat-synchronous the CQT

tempo, beats = librosa.beat.beat_track(y=y, sr=sr, trim=False)
Csync = librosa.util.sync(C, beats, aggregate=np.median)

# For plotting purposes, we'll need the timing of the beats
# we fix_frames to include non-beat frames 0 and C.shape[1] (final frame)
beat_times = librosa.frames_to_time(librosa.util.fix_frames(beats,
                                                            x_min=0),
                                    sr=sr)

fig, ax = plt.subplots()
librosa.display.specshow(Csync, bins_per_octave=12*3,
                         y_axis='cqt_hz', x_axis='time',
                         x_coords=beat_times, ax=ax)
plot segmentation

Let’s build a weighted recurrence matrix using beat-synchronous CQT (Equation 1) width=3 prevents links within the same bar mode=’affinity’ here implements S_rep (after Eq. 8)

R = librosa.segment.recurrence_matrix(Csync, width=3, mode='affinity',
                                      sym=True)

# Enhance diagonals with a median filter (Equation 2)
df = librosa.segment.timelag_filter(scipy.ndimage.median_filter)
Rf = df(R, size=(1, 7))

Now let’s build the sequence matrix (S_loc) using mfcc-similarity

\(R_\text{path}[i, i\pm 1] = \exp(-\|C_i - C_{i\pm 1}\|^2 / \sigma^2)\)

Here, we take \(\sigma\) to be the median distance between successive beats.

And compute the balanced combination (Equations 6, 7, 9)

deg_path = np.sum(R_path, axis=1)
deg_rec = np.sum(Rf, axis=1)

mu = deg_path.dot(deg_path + deg_rec) / np.sum((deg_path + deg_rec)**2)

A = mu * Rf + (1 - mu) * R_path

Plot the resulting graphs (Figure 1, left and center)

fig, ax = plt.subplots(ncols=3, sharex=True, sharey=True, figsize=(10, 4))
librosa.display.specshow(Rf, cmap='inferno_r', y_axis='time', x_axis='s',
                         y_coords=beat_times, x_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[0])
ax[0].set(title='Recurrence similarity')
ax[0].label_outer()
librosa.display.specshow(R_path, cmap='inferno_r', y_axis='time', x_axis='s',
                         y_coords=beat_times, x_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[1])
ax[1].set(title='Path similarity')
ax[1].label_outer()
librosa.display.specshow(A, cmap='inferno_r', y_axis='time', x_axis='s',
                         y_coords=beat_times, x_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[2])
ax[2].set(title='Combined graph')
ax[2].label_outer()
Recurrence similarity, Path similarity, Combined graph

Now let’s compute the normalized Laplacian (Eq. 10)

L = scipy.sparse.csgraph.laplacian(A, normed=True)


# and its spectral decomposition
evals, evecs = scipy.linalg.eigh(L)


# We can clean this up further with a median filter.
# This can help smooth over small discontinuities
evecs = scipy.ndimage.median_filter(evecs, size=(9, 1))


# cumulative normalization is needed for symmetric normalize laplacian eigenvectors
Cnorm = np.cumsum(evecs**2, axis=1)**0.5

# If we want k clusters, use the first k normalized eigenvectors.
# Fun exercise: see how the segmentation changes as you vary k

k = 5

X = evecs[:, :k] / Cnorm[:, k-1:k]


# Plot the resulting representation (Figure 1, center and right)

fig, ax = plt.subplots(ncols=2, sharey=True, figsize=(10, 5))
librosa.display.specshow(Rf, cmap='inferno_r', y_axis='time', x_axis='time',
                         y_coords=beat_times, x_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[1])
ax[1].set(title='Recurrence similarity')
ax[1].label_outer()

librosa.display.specshow(X,
                         y_axis='time',
                         y_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[0])
ax[0].set(title='Structure components')
Structure components, Recurrence similarity

Let’s use these k components to cluster beats into segments (Algorithm 1)

KM = sklearn.cluster.KMeans(n_clusters=k)

seg_ids = KM.fit_predict(X)


# and plot the results
fig, ax = plt.subplots(ncols=3, sharey=True, figsize=(10, 4))
colors = plt.get_cmap('Paired', k)

librosa.display.specshow(Rf, cmap='inferno_r', y_axis='time',
                         y_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[1])
ax[1].set(title='Recurrence matrix')
ax[1].label_outer()

librosa.display.specshow(X,
                         y_axis='time',
                         y_coords=beat_times, ax=ax[0])
ax[0].set(title='Structure components')

img = librosa.display.specshow(np.atleast_2d(seg_ids).T, cmap=colors,
                         y_axis='time',
                         x_coords=[0, 1], y_coords=list(beat_times) + [beat_times[-1]],
                         ax=ax[2])
ax[2].set(title='Estimated labels')

ax[2].label_outer()
fig.colorbar(img, ax=[ax[2]], ticks=range(k))
Structure components, Recurrence matrix, Estimated labels

Locate segment boundaries from the label sequence

bound_beats = 1 + np.flatnonzero(seg_ids[:-1] != seg_ids[1:])

# Count beat 0 as a boundary
bound_beats = librosa.util.fix_frames(bound_beats, x_min=0)

# Compute the segment label for each boundary
bound_segs = list(seg_ids[bound_beats])

# Convert beat indices to frames
bound_frames = beats[bound_beats]

# Make sure we cover to the end of the track
bound_frames = librosa.util.fix_frames(bound_frames,
                                       x_min=None,
                                       x_max=C.shape[1]-1)

And plot the final segmentation over original CQT

# sphinx_gallery_thumbnail_number = 5

import matplotlib.patches as patches
bound_times = librosa.frames_to_time(bound_frames)
freqs = librosa.cqt_frequencies(n_bins=C.shape[0],
                                fmin=librosa.note_to_hz('C1'),
                                bins_per_octave=BINS_PER_OCTAVE)

fig, ax = plt.subplots()
librosa.display.specshow(C, y_axis='cqt_hz', sr=sr,
                         bins_per_octave=BINS_PER_OCTAVE,
                         x_axis='time', ax=ax)

for interval, label in zip(zip(bound_times, bound_times[1:]), bound_segs):
    ax.add_patch(patches.Rectangle((interval[0], freqs[0]),
                                   interval[1] - interval[0],
                                   freqs[-1],
                                   facecolor=colors(label),
                                   alpha=0.50))
plot segmentation

Total running time of the script: ( 0 minutes 7.004 seconds)

Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery