Wu, Z.Khodabakhsh, AliDemiroğlu, CenkYamagishi, J.Saito, D.Toda, T.King, S.2016-02-152016-02-1520151520-6149http://hdl.handle.net/10679/2379https://doi.org/10.1109/ICASSP.2015.7178810Due to copyright restrictions, the access to the full text of this article is only available via subscription.This paper presents the first version of a speaker verification spoofing and anti-spoofing database, named SAS corpus. The corpus includes nine spoofing techniques, two of which are speech synthesis, and seven are voice conversion. We design two protocols, one for standard speaker verification evaluation, and the other for producing spoofing materials. Hence, they allow the speech synthesis community to produce spoofing materials incrementally without knowledge of speaker verification spoofing and anti-spoofing. To provide a set of preliminary results, we conducted speaker verification experiments using two state-of-the-art systems. Without any anti-spoofing techniques, the two systems are extremely vulnerable to the spoofing attacks implemented in our SAS corpus.enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccessSAS : A speaker verification spoofing database containing diverse attacksConference paper4440444400036845240411610.1109/ICASSP.2015.7178810Database management systemsSecurity of dataSpeaker recognitionSpeech synthesis2-s2.0-84946070918