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End-to-end speech translation aims to translate speech in one language into text in another language via an end-to-end way. Most existing methods employ an encoder-decoder structure with a single encoder to learn acoustic representation and semantic information simultaneously, which ignores the speech-and-text modality differences and makes the encoder overloaded, leading to great difficulty in learning such a model. To address these issues, we propose a Speech-to-Text Adaptation for Speech Translation (STAST) model which aims to improve the end-to-end model performance by bridging the modality gap between speech and text. Specifically, we decouple the speech translation encoder into three parts and introduce a shrink mechanism to match the length of speech representation with that of the corresponding text transcription. To obtain better semantic representation, we completely integrate a text-based translation model into the STAST so that two tasks can be trained in the same latent space. Furthermore, we introduce a cross-modal adaptation method to close the distance between speech and text representation. Experimental results on English-French and English-German speech translation corpora have shown that our model significantly outperforms strong baselines, and achieves the new state-of-the-art performance.
Speech-to-text translation (ST), which directly translates the source language speech to the target language text, has attracted intensive attention recently. However, the combination of speech recognition and machine translation in a single model po
Having numerous potential applications and great impact, end-to-end speech translation (ST) has long been treated as an independent task, failing to fully draw strength from the rapid advances of its sibling - text machine translation (MT). With text
Speech-to-text translation (ST), which translates source language speech into target language text, has attracted intensive attention in recent years. Compared to the traditional pipeline system, the end-to-end ST model has potential benefits of lowe
End-to-end Speech-to-text Translation (E2E-ST), which directly translates source language speech to target language text, is widely useful in practice, but traditional cascaded approaches (ASR+MT) often suffer from error propagation in the pipeline.
Simultaneous text translation and end-to-end speech translation have recently made great progress but little work has combined these tasks together. We investigate how to adapt simultaneous text translation methods such as wait-k and monotonic multih