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In this paper, we propose MixSpeech, a simple yet effective data augmentation method based on mixup for automatic speech recognition (ASR). MixSpeech trains an ASR model by taking a weighted combination of two different speech features (e.g., mel-spectrograms or MFCC) as the input, and recognizing both text sequences, where the two recognition losses use the same combination weight. We apply MixSpeech on two popular end-to-end speech recognition models including LAS (Listen, Attend and Spell) and Transformer, and conduct experiments on several low-resource datasets including TIMIT, WSJ, and HKUST. Experimental results show that MixSpeech achieves better accuracy than the baseline models without data augmentation, and outperforms a strong data augmentation method SpecAugment on these recognition tasks. Specifically, MixSpeech outperforms SpecAugment with a relative PER improvement of 10.6$%$ on TIMIT dataset, and achieves a strong WER of 4.7$%$ on WSJ dataset.
Low-resource automatic speech recognition (ASR) is challenging, as the low-resource target language data cannot well train an ASR model. To solve this issue, meta-learning formulates ASR for each source language into many small ASR tasks and meta-lea
Cross-lingual speech adaptation aims to solve the problem of leveraging multiple rich-resource languages to build models for a low-resource target language. Since the low-resource language has limited training data, speech recognition models can easi
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
Varying data augmentation policies and regularization over the course of optimization has led to performance improvements over using fixed values. We show that population based training is a useful tool to continuously search those hyperparameters, w
While low resource speech recognition has attracted a lot of attention from the speech community, there are a few tools available to facilitate low resource speech collection. In this work, we present SANTLR: Speech Annotation Toolkit for Low Resourc