95 research outputs found

    Adaptation Algorithms for Neural Network-Based Speech Recognition: An Overview

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    We present a structured overview of adaptation algorithms for neural network-based speech recognition, considering both hybrid hidden Markov model / neural network systems and end-to-end neural network systems, with a focus on speaker adaptation, domain adaptation, and accent adaptation. The overview characterizes adaptation algorithms as based on embeddings, model parameter adaptation, or data augmentation. We present a meta-analysis of the performance of speech recognition adaptation algorithms, based on relative error rate reductions as reported in the literature.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Open Journal of Signal Processing. 30 pages, 27 figure

    Confidence Score Based Speaker Adaptation of Conformer Speech Recognition Systems

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    Speaker adaptation techniques provide a powerful solution to customise automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems for individual users. Practical application of unsupervised model-based speaker adaptation techniques to data intensive end-to-end ASR systems is hindered by the scarcity of speaker-level data and performance sensitivity to transcription errors. To address these issues, a set of compact and data efficient speaker-dependent (SD) parameter representations are used to facilitate both speaker adaptive training and test-time unsupervised speaker adaptation of state-of-the-art Conformer ASR systems. The sensitivity to supervision quality is reduced using a confidence score-based selection of the less erroneous subset of speaker-level adaptation data. Two lightweight confidence score estimation modules are proposed to produce more reliable confidence scores. The data sparsity issue, which is exacerbated by data selection, is addressed by modelling the SD parameter uncertainty using Bayesian learning. Experiments on the benchmark 300-hour Switchboard and the 233-hour AMI datasets suggest that the proposed confidence score-based adaptation schemes consistently outperformed the baseline speaker-independent (SI) Conformer model and conventional non-Bayesian, point estimate-based adaptation using no speaker data selection. Similar consistent performance improvements were retained after external Transformer and LSTM language model rescoring. In particular, on the 300-hour Switchboard corpus, statistically significant WER reductions of 1.0%, 1.3%, and 1.4% absolute (9.5%, 10.9%, and 11.3% relative) were obtained over the baseline SI Conformer on the NIST Hub5'00, RT02, and RT03 evaluation sets respectively. Similar WER reductions of 2.7% and 3.3% absolute (8.9% and 10.2% relative) were also obtained on the AMI development and evaluation sets.Comment: IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processin

    Discriminative and adaptive training for robust speech recognition and understanding

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    Robust automatic speech recognition (ASR) and understanding (ASU) under various conditions remains to be a challenging problem even with the advances of deep learning. To achieve robust ASU, two discriminative training objectives are proposed for keyword spotting and topic classification: (1) To accurately recognize the semantically important keywords, the non-uniform error cost minimum classification error training of deep neural network (DNN) and bi-directional long short-term memory (BLSTM) acoustic models is proposed to minimize the recognition errors of only the keywords. (2) To compensate for the mismatched objectives of speech recognition and understanding, minimum semantic error cost training of the BLSTM acoustic model is proposed to generate semantically accurate lattices for topic classification. Further, to expand the application of the ASU system to various conditions, four adaptive training approaches are proposed to improve the robustness of the ASR under different conditions: (1) To suppress the effect of inter-speaker variability on speaker-independent DNN acoustic model, speaker-invariant training is proposed to learn a deep representation in the DNN that is both senone-discriminative and speaker-invariant through adversarial multi-task training (2) To achieve condition-robust unsupervised adaptation with parallel data, adversarial teacher-student learning is proposed to suppress multiple factors of condition variability in the procedure of knowledge transfer from a well-trained source domain LSTM acoustic model to the target domain. (3) To further improve the adversarial learning for unsupervised adaptation with unparallel data, domain separation networks are used to enhance the domain-invariance of the senone-discriminative deep representation by explicitly modeling the private component that is unique to each domain. (4) To achieve robust far-field ASR, an LSTM adaptive beamforming network is proposed to estimate the real-time beamforming filter coefficients to cope with non-stationary environmental noise and dynamic nature of source and microphones positions.Ph.D
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