A widespread approach to processing spoken language is to first automatically
transcribe it into text. An alternative is to use an end-to-end approach:
recent works have proposed to learn semantic embeddings of spoken language from
images with spoken captions, without an intermediate transcription step. We
propose to use multitask learning to exploit existing transcribed speech within
the end-to-end setting. We describe a three-task architecture which combines
the objectives of matching spoken captions with corresponding images, speech
with text, and text with images. We show that the addition of the speech/text
task leads to substantial performance improvements on image retrieval when
compared to training the speech/image task in isolation. We conjecture that
this is due to a strong inductive bias transcribed speech provides to the
model, and offer supporting evidence for this.Comment: ACL 201