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In this paper, we conduct data selection analysis in building an English-Mandarin code-switching (CS) speech recognition (CSSR) system, which is aimed for a real CSSR contest in China. The overall training sets have three subsets, i.e., a code-switching data set, an English (LibriSpeech) and a Mandarin data set respectively. The code-switching data are Mandarin dominated. First of all, it is found using the overall data yields worse results, and hence data selection study is necessary. Then to exploit monolingual data, we find data matching is crucial. Mandarin data is closely matched with the Mandarin part in the code-switching data, while English data is not. However, Mandarin data only helps on those utterances that are significantly Mandarin-dominated. Besides, there is a balance point, over which more monolingual data will divert the CSSR system, degrading results. Finally, we analyze the effectiveness of combining monolingual data to train a CSSR system with the HMM-DNN hybrid framework. The CSSR system can perform within-utterance code-switch recognition, but it still has a margin with the one trained on code-switching data.
Code-switching (CS) refers to a linguistic phenomenon where a speaker uses different languages in an utterance or between alternating utterances. In this work, we study end-to-end (E2E) approaches to the Mandarin-English code-switching speech recogni
Recently, there has been significant progress made in Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) of code-switched speech, leading to gains in accuracy on code-switched datasets in many language pairs. Code-switched speech co-occurs with monolingual speech in
Code-switching (CS) occurs when a speaker alternates words of two or more languages within a single sentence or across sentences. Automatic speech recognition (ASR) of CS speech has to deal with two or more languages at the same time. In this study,
In this paper, we present our initial efforts for building a code-switching (CS) speech recognition system leveraging existing acoustic models (AMs) and language models (LMs), i.e., no training required, and specifically targeting intra-sentential sw
The lack of code-switch training data is one of the major concerns in the development of end-to-end code-switching automatic speech recognition (ASR) models. In this work, we propose a method to train an improved end-to-end code-switching ASR using o