Yusuke Fujita

AS
h-index15
35papers
1,902citations
Novelty52%
AI Score57

35 Papers

CLApr 1, 2022
Better Intermediates Improve CTC Inference

Tatsuya Komatsu, Yusuke Fujita, Jaesong Lee et al.

This paper proposes a method for improved CTC inference with searched intermediates and multi-pass conditioning. The paper first formulates self-conditioned CTC as a probabilistic model with an intermediate prediction as a latent representation and provides a tractable conditioning framework. We then propose two new conditioning methods based on the new formulation: (1) Searched intermediate conditioning that refines intermediate predictions with beam-search, (2) Multi-pass conditioning that uses predictions of previous inference for conditioning the next inference. These new approaches enable better conditioning than the original self-conditioned CTC during inference and improve the final performance. Experiments with the LibriSpeech dataset show relative 3%/12% performance improvement at the maximum in test clean/other sets compared to the original self-conditioned CTC.

ASSep 15, 2023
Audio Difference Learning for Audio Captioning

Tatsuya Komatsu, Yusuke Fujita, Kazuya Takeda et al.

This study introduces a novel training paradigm, audio difference learning, for improving audio captioning. The fundamental concept of the proposed learning method is to create a feature representation space that preserves the relationship between audio, enabling the generation of captions that detail intricate audio information. This method employs a reference audio along with the input audio, both of which are transformed into feature representations via a shared encoder. Captions are then generated from these differential features to describe their differences. Furthermore, a unique technique is proposed that involves mixing the input audio with additional audio, and using the additional audio as a reference. This results in the difference between the mixed audio and the reference audio reverting back to the original input audio. This allows the original input's caption to be used as the caption for their difference, eliminating the need for additional annotations for the differences. In the experiments using the Clotho and ESC50 datasets, the proposed method demonstrated an improvement in the SPIDEr score by 7% compared to conventional methods.

ASMar 13, 2023
Neural Diarization with Non-autoregressive Intermediate Attractors

Yusuke Fujita, Tatsuya Komatsu, Robin Scheibler et al.

End-to-end neural diarization (EEND) with encoder-decoder-based attractors (EDA) is a promising method to handle the whole speaker diarization problem simultaneously with a single neural network. While the EEND model can produce all frame-level speaker labels simultaneously, it disregards output label dependency. In this work, we propose a novel EEND model that introduces the label dependency between frames. The proposed method generates non-autoregressive intermediate attractors to produce speaker labels at the lower layers and conditions the subsequent layers with these labels. While the proposed model works in a non-autoregressive manner, the speaker labels are refined by referring to the whole sequence of intermediate labels. The experiments with the two-speaker CALLHOME dataset show that the intermediate labels with the proposed non-autoregressive intermediate attractors boost the diarization performance. The proposed method with the deeper network benefits more from the intermediate labels, resulting in better performance and training throughput than EEND-EDA.

CLApr 1, 2022
InterAug: Augmenting Noisy Intermediate Predictions for CTC-based ASR

Yu Nakagome, Tatsuya Komatsu, Yusuke Fujita et al.

This paper proposes InterAug: a novel training method for CTC-based ASR using augmented intermediate representations for conditioning. The proposed method exploits the conditioning framework of self-conditioned CTC to train robust models by conditioning with "noisy" intermediate predictions. During the training, intermediate predictions are changed to incorrect intermediate predictions, and fed into the next layer for conditioning. The subsequent layers are trained to correct the incorrect intermediate predictions with the intermediate losses. By repeating the augmentation and the correction, iterative refinements, which generally require a special decoder, can be realized only with the audio encoder. To produce noisy intermediate predictions, we also introduce new augmentation: intermediate feature space augmentation and intermediate token space augmentation that are designed to simulate typical errors. The combination of the proposed InterAug framework with new augmentation allows explicit training of the robust audio encoders. In experiments using augmentations simulating deletion, insertion, and substitution error, we confirmed that the trained model acquires robustness to each error, boosting the speech recognition performance of the strong self-conditioned CTC baseline.

CLApr 1, 2022
Alternate Intermediate Conditioning with Syllable-level and Character-level Targets for Japanese ASR

Yusuke Fujita, Tatsuya Komatsu, Yusuke Kida

End-to-end automatic speech recognition directly maps input speech to characters. However, the mapping can be problematic when several different pronunciations should be mapped into one character or when one pronunciation is shared among many different characters. Japanese ASR suffers the most from such many-to-one and one-to-many mapping problems due to Japanese kanji characters. To alleviate the problems, we introduce explicit interaction between characters and syllables using Self-conditioned connectionist temporal classification (CTC), in which the upper layers are ``self-conditioned'' on the intermediate predictions from the lower layers. The proposed method utilizes character-level and syllable-level intermediate predictions as conditioning features to deal with mutual dependency between characters and syllables. Experimental results on Corpus of Spontaneous Japanese show that the proposed method outperformed the conventional multi-task and Self-conditioned CTC methods.

91.7CLMar 10Code
DuplexCascade: Full-Duplex Speech-to-Speech Dialogue with VAD-Free Cascaded ASR-LLM-TTS Pipeline and Micro-Turn Optimization

Jianing Yang, Yusuke Fujita, Yui Sudo

Spoken dialog systems with cascaded ASR-LLM-TTS modules retain strong LLM intelligence, but VAD segmentation often forces half-duplex turns and brittle control. On the other hand, VAD-free end-to-end model support full-duplex interaction but is hard to maintain conversational intelligence. In this paper, we present DuplexCascade, a VAD-free cascaded streaming pipeline for full-duplex speech-to-speech dialogue. Our key idea is to convert conventional utterance-wise long turns into chunk-wise micro-turn interactions, enabling rapid bidirectional exchange while preserving the strengths of a capable text LLM. To reliably coordinate turn-taking and response timing, we introduce a set of conversational special control tokens that steer the LLM's behavior under streaming constraints. On Full-DuplexBench and VoiceBench, DuplexCascade delivers state-of-the-art full-duplex turn-taking and strong conversational intelligence among open-source speech-to-speech dialogue systems.

67.3SDMar 11
Distilling LLM Semantic Priors into Encoder-Only Multi-Talker ASR with Talker-Count Routing

Hao Shi, Yusuke Fujita, Roman Koshkin et al.

Large language models (LLMs) provide strong semantic priors that can improve multi-talker automatic speech recognition (MT-ASR), but using an LLM as an autoregressive decoder is computationally expensive and remains fragile under heavy overlap. In this paper, we propose an encoder-only MT-ASR framework that adapts an LLM to multi-talker conditioning and distills its semantic guidance into the encoder during training, while retaining fast CTC-style decoding at inference. Our model employs a post-encoder separator with serialized CTC to produce talker-ordered transcripts, and leverages an adapted LLM-based SOT objective as a multi-talker-aware teacher signal to explicitly regularize mixed-speech representations. To further support variable numbers of talkers, we introduce a Talker-Count Head that predicts the talker count and dynamically selects the appropriate decoding branch. Experiments on LibriMix show that the proposed encoder-only model achieves comparable performance to LLM-based systems in the two-talker condition, while delivering significant improvements in the three-talker condition with significant small RTF.

SDApr 20, 2020Code
CHiME-6 Challenge:Tackling Multispeaker Speech Recognition for Unsegmented Recordings

Shinji Watanabe, Michael Mandel, Jon Barker et al.

Following the success of the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th CHiME challenges we organize the 6th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition Challenge (CHiME-6). The new challenge revisits the previous CHiME-5 challenge and further considers the problem of distant multi-microphone conversational speech diarization and recognition in everyday home environments. Speech material is the same as the previous CHiME-5 recordings except for accurate array synchronization. The material was elicited using a dinner party scenario with efforts taken to capture data that is representative of natural conversational speech. This paper provides a baseline description of the CHiME-6 challenge for both segmented multispeaker speech recognition (Track 1) and unsegmented multispeaker speech recognition (Track 2). Of note, Track 2 is the first challenge activity in the community to tackle an unsegmented multispeaker speech recognition scenario with a complete set of reproducible open source baselines providing speech enhancement, speaker diarization, and speech recognition modules.

ASSep 13, 2019Code
End-to-End Neural Speaker Diarization with Self-attention

Yusuke Fujita, Naoyuki Kanda, Shota Horiguchi et al.

Speaker diarization has been mainly developed based on the clustering of speaker embeddings. However, the clustering-based approach has two major problems; i.e., (i) it is not optimized to minimize diarization errors directly, and (ii) it cannot handle speaker overlaps correctly. To solve these problems, the End-to-End Neural Diarization (EEND), in which a bidirectional long short-term memory (BLSTM) network directly outputs speaker diarization results given a multi-talker recording, was recently proposed. In this study, we enhance EEND by introducing self-attention blocks instead of BLSTM blocks. In contrast to BLSTM, which is conditioned only on its previous and next hidden states, self-attention is directly conditioned on all the other frames, making it much suitable for dealing with the speaker diarization problem. We evaluated our proposed method on simulated mixtures, real telephone calls, and real dialogue recordings. The experimental results revealed that the self-attention was the key to achieving good performance and that our proposed method performed significantly better than the conventional BLSTM-based method. Our method was even better than that of the state-of-the-art x-vector clustering-based method. Finally, by visualizing the latent representation, we show that the self-attention can capture global speaker characteristics in addition to local speech activity dynamics. Our source code is available online at https://github.com/hitachi-speech/EEND.

ASSep 12, 2019Code
End-to-End Neural Speaker Diarization with Permutation-Free Objectives

Yusuke Fujita, Naoyuki Kanda, Shota Horiguchi et al.

In this paper, we propose a novel end-to-end neural-network-based speaker diarization method. Unlike most existing methods, our proposed method does not have separate modules for extraction and clustering of speaker representations. Instead, our model has a single neural network that directly outputs speaker diarization results. To realize such a model, we formulate the speaker diarization problem as a multi-label classification problem, and introduces a permutation-free objective function to directly minimize diarization errors without being suffered from the speaker-label permutation problem. Besides its end-to-end simplicity, the proposed method also benefits from being able to explicitly handle overlapping speech during training and inference. Because of the benefit, our model can be easily trained/adapted with real-recorded multi-speaker conversations just by feeding the corresponding multi-speaker segment labels. We evaluated the proposed method on simulated speech mixtures. The proposed method achieved diarization error rate of 12.28%, while a conventional clustering-based system produced diarization error rate of 28.77%. Furthermore, the domain adaptation with real-recorded speech provided 25.6% relative improvement on the CALLHOME dataset. Our source code is available online at https://github.com/hitachi-speech/EEND.

80.3CLMar 12
Streaming Translation and Transcription Through Speech-to-Text Causal Alignment

Roman Koshkin, Jeon Haesung, Lianbo Liu et al.

Simultaneous machine translation (SiMT) has traditionally relied on offline machine translation models coupled with human-engineered heuristics or learned policies. We propose Hikari, a policy-free, fully end-to-end model that performs simultaneous speech-to-text translation and streaming transcription by encoding READ/WRITE decisions into a probabilistic WAIT token mechanism. We also introduce Decoder Time Dilation, a mechanism that reduces autoregressive overhead and ensures a balanced training distribution. Additionally, we present a supervised fine-tuning strategy that trains the model to recover from delays, significantly improving the quality-latency trade-off. Evaluated on English-to-Japanese, German, and Russian, Hikari achieves new state-of-the-art BLEU scores in both low- and high-latency regimes, outperforming recent baselines.

CLJan 22, 2024
Keep Decoding Parallel with Effective Knowledge Distillation from Language Models to End-to-end Speech Recognisers

Michael Hentschel, Yuta Nishikawa, Tatsuya Komatsu et al.

This study presents a novel approach for knowledge distillation (KD) from a BERT teacher model to an automatic speech recognition (ASR) model using intermediate layers. To distil the teacher's knowledge, we use an attention decoder that learns from BERT's token probabilities. Our method shows that language model (LM) information can be more effectively distilled into an ASR model using both the intermediate layers and the final layer. By using the intermediate layers as distillation target, we can more effectively distil LM knowledge into the lower network layers. Using our method, we achieve better recognition accuracy than with shallow fusion of an external LM, allowing us to maintain fast parallel decoding. Experiments on the LibriSpeech dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach in enhancing greedy decoding with connectionist temporal classification (CTC).

78.6SDMar 13
Speech-Worthy Alignment for Japanese SpeechLLMs via Direct Preference Optimization

Mengjie Zhao, Lianbo Liu, Yusuke Fujita et al.

SpeechLLMs typically combine ASR-trained encoders with text-based LLM backbones, leading them to inherit written-style output patterns unsuitable for text-to-speech synthesis. This mismatch is particularly pronounced in Japanese, where spoken and written registers differ substantially in politeness markers, sentence-final particles, and syntactic complexity. We propose a preference-based alignment approach to adapt Japanese SpeechLLMs for speech-worthy outputs: text that is concise, conversational, and readily synthesized as natural speech. To rigorously evaluate this task, we introduce SpokenElyza, a benchmark for Japanese speech-worthiness derived from ELYZA-tasks-100 with auditory verification by native experts. Experiments show that our approach achieves substantial improvement on SpokenElyza while largely preserving performance on the original written-style evaluation. We will release SpokenElyza to support future research on Japanese spoken dialog systems.

CLSep 1, 2025
Serialized Output Prompting for Large Language Model-based Multi-Talker Speech Recognition

Hao Shi, Yusuke Fujita, Tomoya Mizumoto et al.

Prompts are crucial for task definition and for improving the performance of large language models (LLM)-based systems. However, existing LLM-based multi-talker (MT) automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems either omit prompts or rely on simple task-definition prompts, with no prior work exploring the design of prompts to enhance performance. In this paper, we propose extracting serialized output prompts (SOP) and explicitly guiding the LLM using structured prompts to improve system performance (SOP-MT-ASR). A Separator and serialized Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) layers are inserted after the speech encoder to separate and extract MT content from the mixed speech encoding in a first-speaking-first-out manner. Subsequently, the SOP, which serves as a prompt for LLMs, is obtained by decoding the serialized CTC outputs using greedy search. To train the model effectively, we design a three-stage training strategy, consisting of serialized output training (SOT) fine-tuning, serialized speech information extraction, and SOP-based adaptation. Experimental results on the LibriMix dataset show that, although the LLM-based SOT model performs well in the two-talker scenario, it fails to fully leverage LLMs under more complex conditions, such as the three-talker scenario. The proposed SOP approach significantly improved performance under both two- and three-talker conditions.

ASJun 12, 2025
AC/DC: LLM-based Audio Comprehension via Dialogue Continuation

Yusuke Fujita, Tomoya Mizumoto, Atsushi Kojima et al.

We propose an instruction-following audio comprehension model that leverages the dialogue continuation ability of large language models (LLMs). Instead of directly generating target captions in training data, the proposed method trains a model to produce responses as if the input caption triggered a dialogue. This dialogue continuation training mitigates the caption variation problem. Learning to continue a dialogue effectively captures the caption's meaning beyond its surface-level words. As a result, our model enables zero-shot instruction-following capability without multitask instruction tuning, even trained solely on audio captioning datasets. Experiments on AudioCaps, WavCaps, and Clotho datasets with AudioBench audio-scene question-answering tests demonstrate our model's ability to follow various unseen instructions.

SDJun 11, 2025
OWSM-Biasing: Contextualizing Open Whisper-Style Speech Models for Automatic Speech Recognition with Dynamic Vocabulary

Yui Sudo, Yusuke Fujita, Atsushi Kojima et al.

Speech foundation models (SFMs), such as Open Whisper-Style Speech Models (OWSM), are trained on massive datasets to achieve accurate automatic speech recognition. However, even SFMs struggle to accurately recognize rare and unseen words. While contextual biasing (CB) is a promising approach to improve recognition of such words, most CB methods are trained from scratch, resulting in lower performance than SFMs due to the lack of pre-trained knowledge. This paper integrates an existing CB method with OWSM v3.1 while freezing its pre-trained parameters. By leveraging the knowledge embedded in SFMs, the proposed method enables effective CB while preserving the advantages of SFMs, even with a small dataset. Experimental results show that the proposed method improves the biasing word error rate (B-WER) by 11.6 points, resulting in a 0.9 point improvement in the overall WER while reducing the real-time factor by 7.5% compared to the non-biasing baseline on the LibriSpeech 100 test-clean set.

ASJun 24, 2024
Song Data Cleansing for End-to-End Neural Singer Diarization Using Neural Analysis and Synthesis Framework

Hokuto Munakata, Ryo Terashima, Yusuke Fujita

We propose a data cleansing method that utilizes a neural analysis and synthesis (NANSY++) framework to train an end-to-end neural diarization model (EEND) for singer diarization. Our proposed model converts song data with choral singing which is commonly contained in popular music and unsuitable for generating a simulated dataset to the solo singing data. This cleansing is based on NANSY++, which is a framework trained to reconstruct an input non-overlapped audio signal. We exploit the pre-trained NANSY++ to convert choral singing into clean, non-overlapped audio. This cleansing process mitigates the mislabeling of choral singing to solo singing and helps the effective training of EEND models even when the majority of available song data contains choral singing sections. We experimentally evaluated the EEND model trained with a dataset using our proposed method using annotated popular duet songs. As a result, our proposed method improved 14.8 points in diarization error rate.

ASJun 20, 2021
Encoder-Decoder Based Attractors for End-to-End Neural Diarization

Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita, Shinji Watanabe et al.

This paper investigates an end-to-end neural diarization (EEND) method for an unknown number of speakers. In contrast to the conventional cascaded approach to speaker diarization, EEND methods are better in terms of speaker overlap handling. However, EEND still has a disadvantage in that it cannot deal with a flexible number of speakers. To remedy this problem, we introduce encoder-decoder-based attractor calculation module (EDA) to EEND. Once frame-wise embeddings are obtained, EDA sequentially generates speaker-wise attractors on the basis of a sequence-to-sequence method using an LSTM encoder-decoder. The attractor generation continues until a stopping condition is satisfied; thus, the number of attractors can be flexible. Diarization results are then estimated as dot products of the attractors and embeddings. The embeddings from speaker overlaps result in larger dot product values with multiple attractors; thus, this method can deal with speaker overlaps. Because the maximum number of output speakers is still limited by the training set, we also propose an iterative inference method to remove this restriction. Further, we propose a method that aligns the estimated diarization results with the results of an external speech activity detector, which enables fair comparison against cascaded approaches. Extensive evaluations on simulated and real datasets show that EEND-EDA outperforms the conventional cascaded approach.

ASJun 9, 2021
Semi-Supervised Training with Pseudo-Labeling for End-to-End Neural Diarization

Yuki Takashima, Yusuke Fujita, Shota Horiguchi et al.

In this paper, we present a semi-supervised training technique using pseudo-labeling for end-to-end neural diarization (EEND). The EEND system has shown promising performance compared with traditional clustering-based methods, especially in the case of overlapping speech. However, to get a well-tuned model, EEND requires labeled data for all the joint speech activities of every speaker at each time frame in a recording. In this paper, we explore a pseudo-labeling approach that employs unlabeled data. First, we propose an iterative pseudo-label method for EEND, which trains the model using unlabeled data of a target condition. Then, we also propose a committee-based training method to improve the performance of EEND. To evaluate our proposed method, we conduct the experiments of model adaptation using labeled and unlabeled data. Experimental results on the CALLHOME dataset show that our proposed pseudo-label achieved a 37.4% relative diarization error rate reduction compared to a seed model. Moreover, we analyzed the results of semi-supervised adaptation with pseudo-labeling. We also show the effectiveness of our approach on the third DIHARD dataset.

ASJun 8, 2021
End-to-End Speaker Diarization Conditioned on Speech Activity and Overlap Detection

Yuki Takashima, Yusuke Fujita, Shinji Watanabe et al.

In this paper, we present a conditional multitask learning method for end-to-end neural speaker diarization (EEND). The EEND system has shown promising performance compared with traditional clustering-based methods, especially in the case of overlapping speech. In this paper, to further improve the performance of the EEND system, we propose a novel multitask learning framework that solves speaker diarization and a desired subtask while explicitly considering the task dependency. We optimize speaker diarization conditioned on speech activity and overlap detection that are subtasks of speaker diarization, based on the probabilistic chain rule. Experimental results show that our proposed method can leverage a subtask to effectively model speaker diarization, and outperforms conventional EEND systems in terms of diarization error rate.

ASFeb 2, 2021
The Hitachi-JHU DIHARD III System: Competitive End-to-End Neural Diarization and X-Vector Clustering Systems Combined by DOVER-Lap

Shota Horiguchi, Nelson Yalta, Paola Garcia et al.

This paper provides a detailed description of the Hitachi-JHU system that was submitted to the Third DIHARD Speech Diarization Challenge. The system outputs the ensemble results of the five subsystems: two x-vector-based subsystems, two end-to-end neural diarization-based subsystems, and one hybrid subsystem. We refine each system and all five subsystems become competitive and complementary. After the DOVER-Lap based system combination, it achieved diarization error rates of 11.58 % and 14.09 % in Track 1 full and core, and 16.94 % and 20.01 % in Track 2 full and core, respectively. With their results, we won second place in all the tasks of the challenge.

SDJan 21, 2021
Online Streaming End-to-End Neural Diarization Handling Overlapping Speech and Flexible Numbers of Speakers

Yawen Xue, Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita et al.

We propose a streaming diarization method based on an end-to-end neural diarization (EEND) model, which handles flexible numbers of speakers and overlapping speech. In our previous study, the speaker-tracing buffer (STB) mechanism was proposed to achieve a chunk-wise streaming diarization using a pre-trained EEND model. STB traces the speaker information in previous chunks to map the speakers in a new chunk. However, it only worked with two-speaker recordings. In this paper, we propose an extended STB for flexible numbers of speakers, FLEX-STB. The proposed method uses a zero-padding followed by speaker-tracing, which alleviates the difference in the number of speakers between a buffer and a current chunk. We also examine buffer update strategies to select important frames for tracing multiple speakers. Experiments on CALLHOME and DIHARD II datasets show that the proposed method achieves comparable performance to the offline EEND method with 1-second latency. The results also show that our proposed method outperforms recently proposed chunk-wise diarization methods based on EEND (BW-EDA-EEND).

ASDec 18, 2020
End-to-End Speaker Diarization as Post-Processing

Shota Horiguchi, Paola Garcia, Yusuke Fujita et al.

This paper investigates the utilization of an end-to-end diarization model as post-processing of conventional clustering-based diarization. Clustering-based diarization methods partition frames into clusters of the number of speakers; thus, they typically cannot handle overlapping speech because each frame is assigned to one speaker. On the other hand, some end-to-end diarization methods can handle overlapping speech by treating the problem as multi-label classification. Although some methods can treat a flexible number of speakers, they do not perform well when the number of speakers is large. To compensate for each other's weakness, we propose to use a two-speaker end-to-end diarization method as post-processing of the results obtained by a clustering-based method. We iteratively select two speakers from the results and update the results of the two speakers to improve the overlapped region. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm consistently improved the performance of the state-of-the-art methods across CALLHOME, AMI, and DIHARD II datasets.

ASNov 16, 2020
Block-Online Guided Source Separation

Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita, Kenji Nagamatsu

We propose a block-online algorithm of guided source separation (GSS). GSS is a speech separation method that uses diarization information to update parameters of the generative model of observation signals. Previous studies have shown that GSS performs well in multi-talker scenarios. However, it requires a large amount of calculation time, which is an obstacle to the deployment of online applications. It is also a problem that the offline GSS is an utterance-wise algorithm so that it produces latency according to the length of the utterance. With the proposed algorithm, block-wise input samples and corresponding time annotations are concatenated with those in the preceding context and used to update the parameters. Using the context enables the algorithm to estimate time-frequency masks accurately only from one iteration of optimization for each block, and its latency does not depend on the utterance length but predetermined block length. It also reduces calculation cost by updating only the parameters of active speakers in each block and its context. Evaluation on the CHiME-6 corpus and a meeting corpus showed that the proposed algorithm achieved almost the same performance as the conventional offline GSS algorithm but with 32x faster calculation, which is sufficient for real-time applications.

ASJul 31, 2020
Utterance-Wise Meeting Transcription System Using Asynchronous Distributed Microphones

Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita, Kenji Nagamatsu

A novel framework for meeting transcription using asynchronous microphones is proposed in this paper. It consists of audio synchronization, speaker diarization, utterance-wise speech enhancement using guided source separation, automatic speech recognition, and duplication reduction. Doing speaker diarization before speech enhancement enables the system to deal with overlapped speech without considering sampling frequency mismatch between microphones. Evaluation on our real meeting datasets showed that our framework achieved a character error rate (CER) of 28.7 % by using 11 distributed microphones, while a monaural microphone placed on the center of the table had a CER of 38.2 %. We also showed that our framework achieved CER of 21.8 %, which is only 2.1 percentage points higher than the CER in headset microphone-based transcription.

ASJun 25, 2020
Sequence to Multi-Sequence Learning via Conditional Chain Mapping for Mixture Signals

Jing Shi, Xuankai Chang, Pengcheng Guo et al.

Neural sequence-to-sequence models are well established for applications which can be cast as mapping a single input sequence into a single output sequence. In this work, we focus on one-to-many sequence transduction problems, such as extracting multiple sequential sources from a mixture sequence. We extend the standard sequence-to-sequence model to a conditional multi-sequence model, which explicitly models the relevance between multiple output sequences with the probabilistic chain rule. Based on this extension, our model can conditionally infer output sequences one-by-one by making use of both input and previously-estimated contextual output sequences. This model additionally has a simple and efficient stop criterion for the end of the transduction, making it able to infer the variable number of output sequences. We take speech data as a primary test field to evaluate our methods since the observed speech data is often composed of multiple sources due to the nature of the superposition principle of sound waves. Experiments on several different tasks including speech separation and multi-speaker speech recognition show that our conditional multi-sequence models lead to consistent improvements over the conventional non-conditional models.

ASJun 25, 2020
Speaker-Conditional Chain Model for Speech Separation and Extraction

Jing Shi, Jiaming Xu, Yusuke Fujita et al.

Speech separation has been extensively explored to tackle the cocktail party problem. However, these studies are still far from having enough generalization capabilities for real scenarios. In this work, we raise a common strategy named Speaker-Conditional Chain Model to process complex speech recordings. In the proposed method, our model first infers the identities of variable numbers of speakers from the observation based on a sequence-to-sequence model. Then, it takes the information from the inferred speakers as conditions to extract their speech sources. With the predicted speaker information from whole observation, our model is helpful to solve the problem of conventional speech separation and speaker extraction for multi-round long recordings. The experiments from standard fully-overlapped speech separation benchmarks show comparable results with prior studies, while our proposed model gets better adaptability for multi-round long recordings.

ASJun 4, 2020
Online End-to-End Neural Diarization with Speaker-Tracing Buffer

Yawen Xue, Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita et al.

This paper proposes a novel online speaker diarization algorithm based on a fully supervised self-attention mechanism (SA-EEND). Online diarization inherently presents a speaker's permutation problem due to the possibility to assign speaker regions incorrectly across the recording. To circumvent this inconsistency, we proposed a speaker-tracing buffer mechanism that selects several input frames representing the speaker permutation information from previous chunks and stores them in a buffer. These buffered frames are stacked with the input frames in the current chunk and fed into a self-attention network. Our method ensures consistent diarization outputs across the buffer and the current chunk by checking the correlation between their corresponding outputs. Additionally, we trained SA-EEND with variable chunk-sizes to mitigate the mismatch between training and inference introduced by the speaker-tracing buffer mechanism. Experimental results, including online SA-EEND and variable chunk-size, achieved DERs of 12.54% for CALLHOME and 20.77% for CSJ with 1.4s actual latency.

ASJun 2, 2020
Neural Speaker Diarization with Speaker-Wise Chain Rule

Yusuke Fujita, Shinji Watanabe, Shota Horiguchi et al.

Speaker diarization is an essential step for processing multi-speaker audio. Although an end-to-end neural diarization (EEND) method achieved state-of-the-art performance, it is limited to a fixed number of speakers. In this paper, we solve this fixed number of speaker issue by a novel speaker-wise conditional inference method based on the probabilistic chain rule. In the proposed method, each speaker's speech activity is regarded as a single random variable, and is estimated sequentially conditioned on previously estimated other speakers' speech activities. Similar to other sequence-to-sequence models, the proposed method produces a variable number of speakers with a stop sequence condition. We evaluated the proposed method on multi-speaker audio recordings of a variable number of speakers. Experimental results show that the proposed method can correctly produce diarization results with a variable number of speakers and outperforms the state-of-the-art end-to-end speaker diarization methods in terms of diarization error rate.

ASMay 20, 2020
End-to-End Speaker Diarization for an Unknown Number of Speakers with Encoder-Decoder Based Attractors

Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita, Shinji Watanabe et al.

End-to-end speaker diarization for an unknown number of speakers is addressed in this paper. Recently proposed end-to-end speaker diarization outperformed conventional clustering-based speaker diarization, but it has one drawback: it is less flexible in terms of the number of speakers. This paper proposes a method for encoder-decoder based attractor calculation (EDA), which first generates a flexible number of attractors from a speech embedding sequence. Then, the generated multiple attractors are multiplied by the speech embedding sequence to produce the same number of speaker activities. The speech embedding sequence is extracted using the conventional self-attentive end-to-end neural speaker diarization (SA-EEND) network. In a two-speaker condition, our method achieved a 2.69 % diarization error rate (DER) on simulated mixtures and a 8.07 % DER on the two-speaker subset of CALLHOME, while vanilla SA-EEND attained 4.56 % and 9.54 %, respectively. In unknown numbers of speakers conditions, our method attained a 15.29 % DER on CALLHOME, while the x-vector-based clustering method achieved a 19.43 % DER.

ASFeb 24, 2020
End-to-End Neural Diarization: Reformulating Speaker Diarization as Simple Multi-label Classification

Yusuke Fujita, Shinji Watanabe, Shota Horiguchi et al.

The most common approach to speaker diarization is clustering of speaker embeddings. However, the clustering-based approach has a number of problems; i.e., (i) it is not optimized to minimize diarization errors directly, (ii) it cannot handle speaker overlaps correctly, and (iii) it has trouble adapting their speaker embedding models to real audio recordings with speaker overlaps. To solve these problems, we propose the End-to-End Neural Diarization (EEND), in which a neural network directly outputs speaker diarization results given a multi-speaker recording. To realize such an end-to-end model, we formulate the speaker diarization problem as a multi-label classification problem and introduce a permutation-free objective function to directly minimize diarization errors. Besides its end-to-end simplicity, the EEND method can explicitly handle speaker overlaps during training and inference. Just by feeding multi-speaker recordings with corresponding speaker segment labels, our model can be easily adapted to real conversations. We evaluated our method on simulated speech mixtures and real conversation datasets. The results showed that the EEND method outperformed the state-of-the-art x-vector clustering-based method, while it correctly handled speaker overlaps. We explored the neural network architecture for the EEND method, and found that the self-attention-based neural network was the key to achieving excellent performance. In contrast to conditioning the network only on its previous and next hidden states, as is done using bidirectional long short-term memory (BLSTM), self-attention is directly conditioned on all the frames. By visualizing the attention weights, we show that self-attention captures global speaker characteristics in addition to local speech activity dynamics, making it especially suitable for dealing with the speaker diarization problem.

ASFeb 14, 2020
Speaker Diarization with Region Proposal Network

Zili Huang, Shinji Watanabe, Yusuke Fujita et al.

Speaker diarization is an important pre-processing step for many speech applications, and it aims to solve the "who spoke when" problem. Although the standard diarization systems can achieve satisfactory results in various scenarios, they are composed of several independently-optimized modules and cannot deal with the overlapped speech. In this paper, we propose a novel speaker diarization method: Region Proposal Network based Speaker Diarization (RPNSD). In this method, a neural network generates overlapped speech segment proposals, and compute their speaker embeddings at the same time. Compared with standard diarization systems, RPNSD has a shorter pipeline and can handle the overlapped speech. Experimental results on three diarization datasets reveal that RPNSD achieves remarkable improvements over the state-of-the-art x-vector baseline.

CLSep 17, 2019
Simultaneous Speech Recognition and Speaker Diarization for Monaural Dialogue Recordings with Target-Speaker Acoustic Models

Naoyuki Kanda, Shota Horiguchi, Yusuke Fujita et al.

This paper investigates the use of target-speaker automatic speech recognition (TS-ASR) for simultaneous speech recognition and speaker diarization of single-channel dialogue recordings. TS-ASR is a technique to automatically extract and recognize only the speech of a target speaker given a short sample utterance of that speaker. One obvious drawback of TS-ASR is that it cannot be used when the speakers in the recordings are unknown because it requires a sample of the target speakers in advance of decoding. To remove this limitation, we propose an iterative method, in which (i) the estimation of speaker embeddings and (ii) TS-ASR based on the estimated speaker embeddings are alternately executed. We evaluated the proposed method by using very challenging dialogue recordings in which the speaker overlap ratio was over 20%. We confirmed that the proposed method significantly reduced both the word error rate (WER) and diarization error rate (DER). Our proposed method combined with i-vector speaker embeddings ultimately achieved a WER that differed by only 2.1 % from that of TS-ASR given oracle speaker embeddings. Furthermore, our method can solve speaker diarization simultaneously as a by-product and achieved better DER than that of the conventional clustering-based speaker diarization method based on i-vector.

CLJun 26, 2019
Auxiliary Interference Speaker Loss for Target-Speaker Speech Recognition

Naoyuki Kanda, Shota Horiguchi, Ryoichi Takashima et al.

In this paper, we propose a novel auxiliary loss function for target-speaker automatic speech recognition (ASR). Our method automatically extracts and transcribes target speaker's utterances from a monaural mixture of multiple speakers speech given a short sample of the target speaker. The proposed auxiliary loss function attempts to additionally maximize interference speaker ASR accuracy during training. This will regularize the network to achieve a better representation for speaker separation, thus achieving better accuracy on the target-speaker ASR. We evaluated our proposed method using two-speaker-mixed speech in various signal-to-interference-ratio conditions. We first built a strong target-speaker ASR baseline based on the state-of-the-art lattice-free maximum mutual information. This baseline achieved a word error rate (WER) of 18.06% on the test set while a normal ASR trained with clean data produced a completely corrupted result (WER of 84.71%). Then, our proposed loss further reduced the WER by 6.6% relative to this strong baseline, achieving a WER of 16.87%. In addition to the accuracy improvement, we also showed that the auxiliary output branch for the proposed loss can even be used for a secondary ASR for interference speakers' speech.

CLMay 29, 2019
Guided Source Separation Meets a Strong ASR Backend: Hitachi/Paderborn University Joint Investigation for Dinner Party ASR

Naoyuki Kanda, Christoph Boeddeker, Jens Heitkaemper et al.

In this paper, we present Hitachi and Paderborn University's joint effort for automatic speech recognition (ASR) in a dinner party scenario. The main challenges of ASR systems for dinner party recordings obtained by multiple microphone arrays are (1) heavy speech overlaps, (2) severe noise and reverberation, (3) very natural conversational content, and possibly (4) insufficient training data. As an example of a dinner party scenario, we have chosen the data presented during the CHiME-5 speech recognition challenge, where the baseline ASR had a 73.3% word error rate (WER), and even the best performing system at the CHiME-5 challenge had a 46.1% WER. We extensively investigated a combination of the guided source separation-based speech enhancement technique and an already proposed strong ASR backend and found that a tight combination of these techniques provided substantial accuracy improvements. Our final system achieved WERs of 39.94% and 41.64% for the development and evaluation data, respectively, both of which are the best published results for the dataset. We also investigated with additional training data on the official small data in the CHiME-5 corpus to assess the intrinsic difficulty of this ASR task.