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Word Error Rate (WER) has been the predominant metric used to evaluate the performance of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems. However, WER is sometimes not a good indicator for downstream Natural Language Understanding (NLU) tasks, such as intent recognition, slot filling, and semantic parsing in task-oriented dialog systems. This is because WER takes into consideration only literal correctness instead of semantic correctness, the latter of which is typically more important for these downstream tasks. In this study, we propose a novel Semantic Distance (SemDist) measure as an alternative evaluation metric for ASR systems to address this issue. We define SemDist as the distance between a reference and hypothesis pair in a sentence-level embedding space. To represent the reference and hypothesis as a sentence embedding, we exploit RoBERTa, a state-of-the-art pre-trained deep contextualized language model based on the transformer architecture. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed metric on various downstream tasks, including intent recognition, semantic parsing, and named entity recognition.
In a modern spoken language understanding (SLU) system, the natural language understanding (NLU) module takes interpretations of a speech from the automatic speech recognition (ASR) module as the input. The NLU module usually uses the first best inte
Language understanding in speech-based systems have attracted much attention in recent years with the growing demand for voice interface applications. However, the robustness of natural language understanding (NLU) systems to errors introduced by aut
End-to-end spoken language understanding (SLU) models are a class of model architectures that predict semantics directly from speech. Because of their input and output types, we refer to them as speech-to-interpretation (STI) models. Previous works h
Spoken Language Understanding (SLU) aims to extract the semantics frame of user queries, which is a core component in a task-oriented dialog system. With the burst of deep neural networks and the evolution of pre-trained language models, the research
Spoken Language Understanding infers semantic meaning directly from audio data, and thus promises to reduce error propagation and misunderstandings in end-user applications. However, publicly available SLU resources are limited. In this paper, we rel