Evaluating Sound Similarity Metrics for Differentiable, Iterative Sound-Matching
Amir Salimi, Abram Hindle, Osmar R. Zaiane

TL;DR
This study evaluates various differentiable sound similarity metrics across multiple synthesizers to determine their effectiveness in iterative sound-matching, revealing that performance highly depends on the synthesis method used.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive analysis of differentiable loss functions for sound-matching across different synthesizers, highlighting the importance of tailored metrics for specific synthesis techniques.
Findings
Loss function performance varies significantly with synthesizer type.
Moderate agreement among different performance evaluation metrics.
No single loss function is universally optimal across all synthesizers.
Abstract
Manual sound design with a synthesizer is inherently iterative: an artist compares the synthesized output to a mental target, adjusts parameters, and repeats until satisfied. Iterative sound-matching automates this workflow by continually programming a synthesizer under the guidance of a loss function (or similarity measure) toward a target sound. Prior comparisons of loss functions have typically favored one metric over another, but only within narrow settings: limited synthesis methods, few loss types, often without blind listening tests. This leaves open the question of whether a universally optimal loss exists, or the choice of loss remains a creative decision conditioned on the synthesis method and the sound designer's preference. We propose differentiable iterative sound-matching as the natural extension of the available literature, since it combines the manual approach to sound…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusic Technology and Sound Studies · Vehicle Noise and Vibration Control · Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation
