This paper focuses on multi-enrollment speaker recognition which naturally occurs in the task of online speaker clustering, and studies the properties of different scoring back-ends in this scenario. First, we show that popular cosine scoring suffers from poor score calibration with a varying number of enrollment utterances. Second, we propose a simple replacement for cosine scoring based on an extremely constrained version of probabilistic linear discriminant analysis (PLDA). The proposed model improves over the cosine scoring for multi-enrollment recognition while keeping the same performance in the case of one-to-one comparisons. Finally, we consider an online speaker clustering task where each step naturally involves multi-enrollment recognition. We propose an online clustering algorithm allowing us to take benefits from the PLDA model such as the ability to handle uncertainty and better score calibration. Our experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithm.
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