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Dialog-context aware end-to-end speech recognition

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 Added by Suyoun Kim
 Publication date 2018
and research's language is English




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Existing speech recognition systems are typically built at the sentence level, although it is known that dialog context, e.g. higher-level knowledge that spans across sentences or speakers, can help the processing of long conversations. The recent progress in end-to-end speech recognition systems promises to integrate all available information (e.g. acoustic, language resources) into a single model, which is then jointly optimized. It seems natural that such dialog context information should thus also be integrated into the end-to-end models to improve further recognition accuracy. In this work, we present a dialog-context aware speech recognition model, which explicitly uses context information beyond sentence-level information, in an end-to-end fashion. Our dialog-context model captures a history of sentence-level context so that the whole system can be trained with dialog-context information in an end-to-end manner. We evaluate our proposed approach on the Switchboard conversational speech corpus and show that our system outperforms a comparable sentence-level end-to-end speech recognition system.



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This paper addresses end-to-end automatic speech recognition (ASR) for long audio recordings such as lecture and conversational speeches. Most end-to-end ASR models are designed to recognize independent utterances, but contextual information (e.g., speaker or topic) over multiple utterances is known to be useful for ASR. In our prior work, we proposed a context-expanded Transformer that accepts multiple consecutive utterances at the same time and predicts an output sequence for the last utterance, achieving 5-15% relative error reduction from utterance-based baselines in lecture and conversational ASR benchmarks. Although the results have shown remarkable performance gain, there is still potential to further improve the model architecture and the decoding process. In this paper, we extend our prior work by (1) introducing the Conformer architecture to further improve the accuracy, (2) accelerating the decoding process with a novel activation recycling technique, and (3) enabling streaming decoding with triggered attention. We demonstrate that the extended Transformer provides state-of-the-art end-to-end ASR performance, obtaining a 17.3% character error rate for the HKUST dataset and 12.0%/6.3% word error rates for the Switchboard-300 Eval2000 CallHome/Switchboard test sets. The new decoding method reduces decoding time by more than 50% and further enables streaming ASR with limited accuracy degradation.
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