18 research outputs found

    Advances in Joint CTC-Attention based End-to-End Speech Recognition with a Deep CNN Encoder and RNN-LM

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    We present a state-of-the-art end-to-end Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) model. We learn to listen and write characters with a joint Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) and attention-based encoder-decoder network. The encoder is a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) based on the VGG network. The CTC network sits on top of the encoder and is jointly trained with the attention-based decoder. During the beam search process, we combine the CTC predictions, the attention-based decoder predictions and a separately trained LSTM language model. We achieve a 5-10\% error reduction compared to prior systems on spontaneous Japanese and Chinese speech, and our end-to-end model beats out traditional hybrid ASR systems.Comment: Accepted for INTERSPEECH 201

    Automatic Speech Recognition for Low-Resource and Morphologically Complex Languages

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    The application of deep neural networks to the task of acoustic modeling for automatic speech recognition (ASR) has resulted in dramatic decreases of word error rates, allowing for the use of this technology in smart phones and personal home assistants in high-resource languages. Developing ASR models of this caliber, however, requires hundreds or thousands of hours of transcribed speech recordings, which presents challenges for most of the world’s languages. In this work, we investigate the applicability of three distinct architectures that have previously been used for ASR in languages with limited training resources. We tested these architectures using publicly available ASR datasets for several typologically and orthographically diverse languages, whose data was produced under a variety of conditions using different speech collection strategies, practices, and equipment. Additionally, we performed data augmentation on this audio, such that the amount of data could increase nearly tenfold, synthetically creating higher resource training. The architectures and their individual components were modified, and parameters explored such that we might find a best-fit combination of features and modeling schemas to fit a specific language morphology. Our results point to the importance of considering language-specific and corpus-specific factors and experimenting with multiple approaches when developing ASR systems for resource-constrained languages
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