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Encoder-decoder models provide a generic architecture for sequence-to-sequence tasks such as speech recognition and translation. While offline systems are often evaluated on quality metrics like word error rates (WER) and BLEU, latency is also a crucial factor in many practical use-cases. We propose three latency reduction techniques for chunk-based incremental inference and evaluate their efficiency in terms of accuracy-latency trade-off. On the 300-hour How2 dataset, we reduce latency by 83% to 0.8 second by sacrificing 1% WER (6% rel.) compared to offline transcription. Although our experiments use the Transformer, the hypothesis selection strategies are applicable to other encoder-decoder models. To avoid expensive re-computation, we use a unidirectionally-attending encoder. After an adaptation procedure to partial sequences, the unidirectional model performs on-par with the original model. We further show that our approach is also applicable to low-latency speech translation. On How2 English-Portuguese speech translation, we reduce latency to 0.7 second (-84% rel.) while incurring a loss of 2.4 BLEU points (5% rel.) compared to the offline system.
Techniques for multi-lingual and cross-lingual speech recognition can help in low resource scenarios, to bootstrap systems and enable analysis of new languages and domains. End-to-end approaches, in particular sequence-based techniques, are attractiv
In this paper, we investigate the benefit that off-the-shelf word embedding can bring to the sequence-to-sequence (seq-to-seq) automatic speech recognition (ASR). We first introduced the word embedding regularization by maximizing the cosine similari
Speech applications dealing with conversations require not only recognizing the spoken words, but also determining who spoke when. The task of assigning words to speakers is typically addressed by merging the outputs of two separate systems, namely,
In Mandarin text-to-speech (TTS) system, the front-end text processing module significantly influences the intelligibility and naturalness of synthesized speech. Building a typical pipeline-based front-end which consists of multiple individual compon
We present an attention-based sequence-to-sequence neural network which can directly translate speech from one language into speech in another language, without relying on an intermediate text representation. The network is trained end-to-end, learni