1,444 research outputs found
Deep Multimodal Learning for Audio-Visual Speech Recognition
In this paper, we present methods in deep multimodal learning for fusing
speech and visual modalities for Audio-Visual Automatic Speech Recognition
(AV-ASR). First, we study an approach where uni-modal deep networks are trained
separately and their final hidden layers fused to obtain a joint feature space
in which another deep network is built. While the audio network alone achieves
a phone error rate (PER) of under clean condition on the IBM large
vocabulary audio-visual studio dataset, this fusion model achieves a PER of
demonstrating the tremendous value of the visual channel in phone
classification even in audio with high signal to noise ratio. Second, we
present a new deep network architecture that uses a bilinear softmax layer to
account for class specific correlations between modalities. We show that
combining the posteriors from the bilinear networks with those from the fused
model mentioned above results in a further significant phone error rate
reduction, yielding a final PER of .Comment: ICASSP 201
DNN adaptation by automatic quality estimation of ASR hypotheses
In this paper we propose to exploit the automatic Quality Estimation (QE) of
ASR hypotheses to perform the unsupervised adaptation of a deep neural network
modeling acoustic probabilities. Our hypothesis is that significant
improvements can be achieved by: i)automatically transcribing the evaluation
data we are currently trying to recognise, and ii) selecting from it a subset
of "good quality" instances based on the word error rate (WER) scores predicted
by a QE component. To validate this hypothesis, we run several experiments on
the evaluation data sets released for the CHiME-3 challenge. First, we operate
in oracle conditions in which manual transcriptions of the evaluation data are
available, thus allowing us to compute the "true" sentence WER. In this
scenario, we perform the adaptation with variable amounts of data, which are
characterised by different levels of quality. Then, we move to realistic
conditions in which the manual transcriptions of the evaluation data are not
available. In this case, the adaptation is performed on data selected according
to the WER scores "predicted" by a QE component. Our results indicate that: i)
QE predictions allow us to closely approximate the adaptation results obtained
in oracle conditions, and ii) the overall ASR performance based on the proposed
QE-driven adaptation method is significantly better than the strong, most
recent, CHiME-3 baseline.Comment: Computer Speech & Language December 201
SEGAN: Speech Enhancement Generative Adversarial Network
Current speech enhancement techniques operate on the spectral domain and/or
exploit some higher-level feature. The majority of them tackle a limited number
of noise conditions and rely on first-order statistics. To circumvent these
issues, deep networks are being increasingly used, thanks to their ability to
learn complex functions from large example sets. In this work, we propose the
use of generative adversarial networks for speech enhancement. In contrast to
current techniques, we operate at the waveform level, training the model
end-to-end, and incorporate 28 speakers and 40 different noise conditions into
the same model, such that model parameters are shared across them. We evaluate
the proposed model using an independent, unseen test set with two speakers and
20 alternative noise conditions. The enhanced samples confirm the viability of
the proposed model, and both objective and subjective evaluations confirm the
effectiveness of it. With that, we open the exploration of generative
architectures for speech enhancement, which may progressively incorporate
further speech-centric design choices to improve their performance.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted in INTERSPEECH 201
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