116 research outputs found

    A Systematic Review and Analysis of Multilingual Data Strategies in Text-to-Speech for Low-Resource Languages

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    We provide a systematic review of past studies that use multilingual data for text-to-speech (TTS) of low-resource languages (LRLs). We focus on the strategies used by these studies for incorporating multilingual data and how they affect output speech quality. To investigate the difference in output quality between corresponding monolingual and multilingual models, we propose a novel measure to compare this difference across the included studies and their various evaluation metrics. This measure, called the Multilingual Model Effect (MLME), is found to be affected by: acoustic model architecture, the difference ratio of target language data between corresponding multilingual and monolingual experiments, the balance ratio of target language data to total data, and the amount of target language data used. These findings can act as reference for data strategies in future experiments with multilingual TTS models for LRLs. Language family classification, despite being widely used, is not found to be an effective criterion for selecting source languages

    A study on reusing resources of speech synthesis for closely-related languages

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    This thesis describes research on building a text-to-speech (TTS) framework that can accommodate the lack of linguistic information of under-resource languages by using existing resources from another language. It describes the adaptation process required when such limited resource is used. The main natural languages involved in this research are Malay and Iban language. The thesis includes a study on grapheme to phoneme mapping and the substitution of phonemes. A set of substitution matrices is presented which show the phoneme confusion in term of perception among respondents. The experiments conducted study the intelligibility as well as perception based on context of utterances. The study on the phonetic prosody is then presented and compared to the Klatt duration model. This is to find the similarities of cross language duration model if one exists. Then a comparative study of Iban native speaker with an Iban polyglot TTS using Malay resources is presented. This is to confirm that the prosody of Malay can be used to generate Iban synthesised speech. The central hypothesis of this thesis is that by using a closely-related language resource, a natural sounding speech can be produced. The aim of this research was to show that by sticking to the indigenous language characteristics, it is possible to build a polyglot synthesised speech system even with insufficient speech resources

    Multinomial logistic regression probability ratio-based feature vectors for Malay vowel recognition

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    Vowel Recognition is a part of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems that classifies speech signals into groups of vowels. The performance of Malay vowel recognition (MVR) like any multiclass classification problem depends largely on Feature Vectors (FVs). FVs such as Mel-frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC) have produced high error rates due to poor phoneme information. Classifier transformed probabilistic features have proved a better alternative in conveying phoneme information. However, the high dimensionality of the probabilistic features introduces additional complexity that deteriorates ASR performance. This study aims to improve MVR performance by proposing an algorithm that transforms MFCC FVs into a new set of features using Multinomial Logistic Regression (MLR) to reduce the dimensionality of the probabilistic features. This study was carried out in four phases which are pre-processing and feature extraction, best regression coefficients generation, feature transformation, and performance evaluation. The speech corpus consists of 1953 samples of five Malay vowels of /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/ and /u/ recorded from students of two public universities in Malaysia. Two sets of algorithms were developed which are DBRCs and FELT. DBRCs algorithm determines the best regression coefficients (DBRCs) to obtain the best set of regression coefficients (RCs) from the extracted 39-MFCC FVs through resampling and data swapping approach. FELT algorithm transforms 39-MFCC FVs using logistic transformation method into FELT FVs. Vowel recognition rates of FELT and 39-MFCC FVs were compared using four different classification techniques of Artificial Neural Network, MLR, Linear Discriminant Analysis, and k-Nearest Neighbour. Classification results showed that FELT FVs surpass the performance of 39-MFCC FVs in MVR. Depending on the classifiers used, the improved performance of 1.48% - 11.70% was attained by FELT over MFCC. Furthermore, FELT significantly improved the recognition accuracy of vowels /o/ and /u/ by 5.13% and 8.04% respectively. This study contributes two algorithms for determining the best set of RCs and generating FELT FVs from MFCC. The FELT FVs eliminate the need for dimensionality reduction with comparable performances. Furthermore, FELT FVs improved MVR for all the five vowels especially /o/ and /u/. The improved MVR performance will spur the development of Malay speech-based systems, especially for the Malaysian community

    Temporally Varying Weight Regression for Speech Recognition

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    Ph.DDOCTOR OF PHILOSOPH

    Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Student Research Workshop

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    Indonesian and Malay are underrepresented in the development of natural language processing (NLP) technologies and available resources are difficult to find. A clear picture of existing work can invigorate and inform how researchers conceptualise worthwhile projects. Using an education sector project to motivate the study, we conducted a wide-ranging overview of Indonesian and Malay human language technologies and corpus work. We charted 657 included studies according to Hirschberg and Manning's 2015 description of NLP, concluding that the field was dominated by exploratory corpus work, machine reading of text gathered from the Internet, and sentiment analysis. In this paper, we identify most published authors and research hubs, and make a number of recommendations to encourage future collaboration and efficiency within NLP in Indonesian and Malay

    Malay articulation system for early screening diagnostic using hidden markov model and genetic algorithm

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    Speech recognition is an important technology and can be used as a great aid for individuals with sight or hearing disabilities today. There are extensive research interest and development in this area for over the past decades. However, the prospect in Malaysia regarding the usage and exposure is still immature even though there is demand from the medical and healthcare sector. The aim of this research is to assess the quality and the impact of using computerized method for early screening of speech articulation disorder among Malaysian such as the omission, substitution, addition and distortion in their speech. In this study, the statistical probabilistic approach using Hidden Markov Model (HMM) has been adopted with newly designed Malay corpus for articulation disorder case following the SAMPA and IPA guidelines. Improvement is made at the front-end processing for feature vector selection by applying the silence region calibration algorithm for start and end point detection. The classifier had also been modified significantly by incorporating Viterbi search with Genetic Algorithm (GA) to obtain high accuracy in recognition result and for lexical unit classification. The results were evaluated by following National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) benchmarking. Based on the test, it shows that the recognition accuracy has been improved by 30% to 40% using Genetic Algorithm technique compared with conventional technique. A new corpus had been built with verification and justification from the medical expert in this study. In conclusion, computerized method for early screening can ease human effort in tackling speech disorders and the proposed Genetic Algorithm technique has been proven to improve the recognition performance in terms of search and classification task

    Automatic Pronunciation Assessment -- A Review

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    Pronunciation assessment and its application in computer-aided pronunciation training (CAPT) have seen impressive progress in recent years. With the rapid growth in language processing and deep learning over the past few years, there is a need for an updated review. In this paper, we review methods employed in pronunciation assessment for both phonemic and prosodic. We categorize the main challenges observed in prominent research trends, and highlight existing limitations, and available resources. This is followed by a discussion of the remaining challenges and possible directions for future work.Comment: 9 pages, accepted to EMNLP Finding

    NusaCrowd: Open Source Initiative for Indonesian NLP Resources

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    We present NusaCrowd, a collaborative initiative to collect and unify existing resources for Indonesian languages, including opening access to previously non-public resources. Through this initiative, we have brought together 137 datasets and 118 standardized data loaders. The quality of the datasets has been assessed manually and automatically, and their value is demonstrated through multiple experiments. NusaCrowd's data collection enables the creation of the first zero-shot benchmarks for natural language understanding and generation in Indonesian and the local languages of Indonesia. Furthermore, NusaCrowd brings the creation of the first multilingual automatic speech recognition benchmark in Indonesian and the local languages of Indonesia. Our work strives to advance natural language processing (NLP) research for languages that are under-represented despite being widely spoken

    Acoustic Modelling for Under-Resourced Languages

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    Automatic speech recognition systems have so far been developed only for very few languages out of the 4,000-7,000 existing ones. In this thesis we examine methods to rapidly create acoustic models in new, possibly under-resourced languages, in a time and cost effective manner. For this we examine the use of multilingual models, the application of articulatory features across languages, and the automatic discovery of word-like units in unwritten languages

    Automatic Speech Recognition without Transcribed Speech or Pronunciation Lexicons

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    Rapid deployment of automatic speech recognition (ASR) in new languages, with very limited data, is of great interest and importance for intelligence gathering, as well as for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief (HADR). Deploying ASR systems in these languages often relies on cross-lingual acoustic modeling followed by supervised adaptation and almost always assumes that either a pronunciation lexicon using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), and/or some amount of transcribed speech exist in the new language of interest. For many languages, neither requirement is generally true -- only a limited amount of text and untranscribed audio is available. This work focuses specifically on scalable techniques for building ASR systems in most languages without any existing transcribed speech or pronunciation lexicons. We first demonstrate how cross-lingual acoustic model transfer, when phonemic pronunciation lexicons do exist in a new language, can significantly reduce the need for target-language transcribed speech. We then explore three methods for handling languages without a pronunciation lexicon. First we examine the effectiveness of graphemic acoustic model transfer, which allows for pronunciation lexicons to be trivially constructed. We then present two methods for rapid construction of phonemic pronunciation lexicons based on submodular selection of a small set of words for manual annotation, or words from other languages for which we have IPA pronunciations. We also explore techniques for training sequence-to-sequence models with very small amounts of data by transferring models trained on other languages, and leveraging large unpaired text corpora in training. Finally, as an alternative to acoustic model transfer, we present a novel hybrid generative/discriminative semi-supervised training framework that merges recent progress in Energy Based Models (EBMs) as well as lattice-free maximum mutual information (LF-MMI) training, capable of making use of purely untranscribed audio. Together, these techniques enabled ASR capabilities that supported triage of spoken communications in real-world HADR work-flows in many languages using fewer than 30 minutes of transcribed speech. These techniques were successfully applied in multiple NIST evaluations and were among the top-performing systems in each evaluation
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