273 research outputs found

    Combining Evidence from Unconstrained Spoken Term Frequency Estimation for Improved Speech Retrieval

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    This dissertation considers the problem of information retrieval in speech. Today's speech retrieval systems generally use a large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system to first hypothesize the words which were spoken. Because these systems have a predefined lexicon, words which fall outside of the lexicon can significantly reduce search quality---as measured by Mean Average Precision (MAP). This is particularly important because these Out-Of-Vocabulary (OOV) words are often rare and therefore good discriminators for topically relevant speech segments. The focus of this dissertation is on handling these out-of-vocabulary query words. The approach is to combine results from a word-based speech retrieval system with those from vocabulary-independent ranked utterance retrieval. The goal of ranked utterance retrieval is to rank speech utterances by the system's confidence that they contain a particular spoken word, which is accomplished by ranking the utterances by the estimated frequency of the word in the utterance. Several new approaches for estimating this frequency are considered, which are motivated by the disparity between reference and errorfully hypothesized phoneme sequences. The first method learns alternate pronunciations or degradations from actual recognition hypotheses and incorporates these variants into a new generative estimator for term frequency. A second method learns transformations of several easily computed features in a discriminative model for the same task. Both methods significantly improved ranked utterance retrieval in an experimental validation on new speech. The best of these ranked utterance retrieval methods is then combined with a word-based speech retrieval system. The combination approach uses a normalization learned in an additive model, which maps the retrieval status values from each system into estimated probabilities of relevance that are easily combined. Using this combination, much of the MAP lost because of OOV words is recovered. Evaluated on a collection of spontaneous, conversational speech, the system recovers 57.5\% of the MAP lost on short (title-only) queries and 41.3\% on longer (title plus description) queries

    Spoken content retrieval: A survey of techniques and technologies

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    Speech media, that is, digital audio and video containing spoken content, has blossomed in recent years. Large collections are accruing on the Internet as well as in private and enterprise settings. This growth has motivated extensive research on techniques and technologies that facilitate reliable indexing and retrieval. Spoken content retrieval (SCR) requires the combination of audio and speech processing technologies with methods from information retrieval (IR). SCR research initially investigated planned speech structured in document-like units, but has subsequently shifted focus to more informal spoken content produced spontaneously, outside of the studio and in conversational settings. This survey provides an overview of the field of SCR encompassing component technologies, the relationship of SCR to text IR and automatic speech recognition and user interaction issues. It is aimed at researchers with backgrounds in speech technology or IR who are seeking deeper insight on how these fields are integrated to support research and development, thus addressing the core challenges of SCR

    Search on speech from spoken queries: the Multi-domain International ALBAYZIN 2018 Query-by-Example Spoken Term Detection Evaluation

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    [Abstract] The huge amount of information stored in audio and video repositories makes search on speech (SoS) a priority area nowadays. Within SoS, Query-by-Example Spoken Term Detection (QbE STD) aims to retrieve data from a speech repository given a spoken query. Research on this area is continuously fostered with the organization of QbE STD evaluations. This paper presents a multi-domain internationally open evaluation for QbE STD in Spanish. The evaluation aims at retrieving the speech files that contain the queries, providing their start and end times, and a score that reflects the confidence given to the detection. Three different Spanish speech databases that encompass different domains have been employed in the evaluation: MAVIR database, which comprises a set of talks from workshops; RTVE database, which includes broadcast television (TV) shows; and COREMAH database, which contains 2-people spontaneous speech conversations about different topics. The evaluation has been designed carefully so that several analyses of the main results can be carried out. We present the evaluation itself, the three databases, the evaluation metrics, the systems submitted to the evaluation, the results, and the detailed post-evaluation analyses based on some query properties (within-vocabulary/out-of-vocabulary queries, single-word/multi-word queries, and native/foreign queries). Fusion results of the primary systems submitted to the evaluation are also presented. Three different teams took part in the evaluation, and ten different systems were submitted. The results suggest that the QbE STD task is still in progress, and the performance of these systems is highly sensitive to changes in the data domain. Nevertheless, QbE STD strategies are able to outperform text-based STD in unseen data domains.Centro singular de investigación de Galicia; ED431G/04Universidad del País Vasco; GIU16/68Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad; TEC2015-68172-C2-1-PMinisterio de Ciencia, Innovación y Competitividad; RTI2018-098091-B-I00Xunta de Galicia; ED431G/0

    Searching Spontaneous Conversational Speech:Proceedings of ACM SIGIR Workshop (SSCS2008)

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    Proceedings of the ACM SIGIR Workshop ''Searching Spontaneous Conversational Speech''

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    On the voice-activated question answering

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    [EN] Question answering (QA) is probably one of the most challenging tasks in the field of natural language processing. It requires search engines that are capable of extracting concise, precise fragments of text that contain an answer to a question posed by the user. The incorporation of voice interfaces to the QA systems adds a more natural and very appealing perspective for these systems. This paper provides a comprehensive description of current state-of-the-art voice-activated QA systems. Finally, the scenarios that will emerge from the introduction of speech recognition in QA will be discussed. © 2006 IEEE.This work was supported in part by Research Projects TIN2009-13391-C04-03 and TIN2008-06856-C05-02. This paper was recommended by Associate Editor V. Marik.Rosso, P.; Hurtado Oliver, LF.; Segarra Soriano, E.; Sanchís Arnal, E. (2012). On the voice-activated question answering. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part C: Applications and Reviews. 42(1):75-85. https://doi.org/10.1109/TSMCC.2010.2089620S758542

    Topic-enhanced Models for Speech Recognition and Retrieval

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    This thesis aims to examine ways in which topical information can be used to improve recognition and retrieval of spoken documents. We consider the interrelated concepts of locality, repetition, and `subject of discourse' in the context of speech processing applications: speech recognition, speech retrieval, and topic identification of speech. This work demonstrates how supervised and unsupervised models of topics, applicable to any language, can improve accuracy in accessing spoken content. This work looks at the complementary aspects of topic information in lexical content in terms of local context - locality or repetition of word usage - and broad context - the typical `subject matter' definition of a topic. By augmenting speech processing language models with topic information we can demonstrate consistent improvements in performance in a number of metrics. We add locality to bags-of-words topic identification models, we quantify the relationship between topic information and keyword retrieval, and we consider word repetition both in terms of keyword based retrieval and language modeling. Lastly, we combine these concepts and develop joint models of local and broad context via latent topic models. We present a latent topic model framework that treats documents as arising from an underlying topic sequence combined with a cache-based repetition model. We analyze our proposed model both for its ability to capture word repetition via the cache and for its suitability as a language model for speech recognition and retrieval. We show this model, augmented with the cache, captures intuitive repetition behavior across languages and exhibits lower perplexity than regular LDA on held out data in multiple languages. Lastly, we show that our joint model improves speech retrieval performance beyond N-grams or latent topics alone, when applied to a term detection task in all languages considered
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