Daxin Tan

AS
h-index2
17papers
184citations
Novelty48%
AI Score55

17 Papers

92.5ASJun 1Code
SpeechEditBench: A Bilingual Multi-Attribute Benchmark for Instruction-Guided Speech Editing

Hanlin Zhang, Daxin Tan, Dehua Tao et al.

Instruction-guided speech editing requires a model to modify specified speech attributes while preserving unrelated characteristics. Despite rapid progress in Speech Large Language Models (Speech LLMs), systematic evaluation of this capability remains challenging, as existing benchmarks are fragmented across isolated editing tasks. To bridge this gap, we introduce \textbf{SpeechEditBench}, a bilingual multi-attribute benchmark for instruction-guided speech editing. SpeechEditBench encompasses seven atomic editing tasks, as well as compositional editing tasks that integrate multiple operations within a single instruction. We propose an anchor-based evaluation protocol that separately assesses the edit success of target attributes and the preservation of untargeted attributes, leading to three metrics: target success, preservation success, and joint success. Using this benchmark, we evaluate mainstream Speech LLMs and specialized speech editing systems. The results reveal three key findings: (1) no single model performs well across all editing dimensions; (2) closed-source Speech LLMs generally outperform open-source models; (3) compositional editing remains highly challenging, with even the most advanced models struggling to achieve high joint success. SpeechEditBench provides a rigorous diagnostic framework to identify bottlenecks in Speech LLMs, thereby facilitating the development of next-generation Speech LLMs with more robust and precise instruction-guided editing capabilities. Data and code will be released upon acceptance.

CVSep 26, 2024Code
EMOVA: Empowering Language Models to See, Hear and Speak with Vivid Emotions

Kai Chen, Yunhao Gou, Runhui Huang et al.

GPT-4o, an omni-modal model that enables vocal conversations with diverse emotions and tones, marks a milestone for omni-modal foundation models. However, empowering Large Language Models to perceive and generate images, texts, and speeches end-to-end with publicly available data remains challenging for the open-source community. Existing vision-language models rely on external tools for speech processing, while speech-language models still suffer from limited or totally without vision-understanding capabilities. To address this gap, we propose the EMOVA (EMotionally Omni-present Voice Assistant), to enable Large Language Models with end-to-end speech abilities while maintaining the leading vision-language performance. With a semantic-acoustic disentangled speech tokenizer, we surprisingly notice that omni-modal alignment can further enhance vision-language and speech abilities compared with the bi-modal aligned counterparts. Moreover, a lightweight style module is introduced for the flexible speech style controls including emotions and pitches. For the first time, EMOVA achieves state-of-the-art performance on both the vision-language and speech benchmarks, and meanwhile, supporting omni-modal spoken dialogue with vivid emotions.

90.7SDMay 26
DSA-Tokenizer: Disentangled Semantic-Acoustic Tokenization via Flow Matching-based Hierarchical Fusion

Hanlin Zhang, Daxin Tan, Dehua Tao et al.

Speech tokenizers are a key building block of fully discrete Speech LLMs. Existing tokenizers either prioritize semantic encoding, fuse semantic content with acoustic style inseparably, or achieve incomplete semantic-acoustic disentanglement. To achieve better disentanglement, we propose \textbf{DSA-Tokenizer}, which explicitly disentangles speech into discrete semantic and acoustic tokens via distinct optimization constraints. Specifically, semantic tokens are supervised by ASR to capture linguistic content, while acoustic tokens focus on mel-spectrograms restoration to encode style. We further introduce a hierarchical Flow Matching decoder and a joint reconstruction-context inpainting training strategy, allowing the model to support both high-fidelity reconstruction and cross-utterance voice clone. To speed up inference, we distill the DiT decoder to reduce sampling steps of inference to 4 and improve synthesis quality with GAN fine-tuning. Experiments demonstrate that DSA-Tokenizer provides strong semantic-acoustic disentanglement, reliable controllable voice cloning, and efficient high-fidelity generation with low WER/CER. Moreover, our results suggest that disentangled tokenization provides a more effective interface for downstream large-model speech generation. Audio samples are avaialble at https://anonymous.4open.science/w/DSA_Tokenizer_demo/.

ASDec 7, 2022
Analysis and Utilization of Entrainment on Acoustic and Emotion Features in User-agent Dialogue

Daxin Tan, Nikos Kargas, David McHardy et al. · amazon-science

Entrainment is the phenomenon by which an interlocutor adapts their speaking style to align with their partner in conversations. It has been found in different dimensions as acoustic, prosodic, lexical or syntactic. In this work, we explore and utilize the entrainment phenomenon to improve spoken dialogue systems for voice assistants. We first examine the existence of the entrainment phenomenon in human-to-human dialogues in respect to acoustic feature and then extend the analysis to emotion features. The analysis results show strong evidence of entrainment in terms of both acoustic and emotion features. Based on this findings, we implement two entrainment policies and assess if the integration of entrainment principle into a Text-to-Speech (TTS) system improves the synthesis performance and the user experience. It is found that the integration of the entrainment principle into a TTS system brings performance improvement when considering acoustic features, while no obvious improvement is observed when considering emotion features.

ASApr 12, 2022
CorrectSpeech: A Fully Automated System for Speech Correction and Accent Reduction

Daxin Tan, Liqun Deng, Nianzu Zheng et al.

This study propose a fully automated system for speech correction and accent reduction. Consider the application scenario that a recorded speech audio contains certain errors, e.g., inappropriate words, mispronunciations, that need to be corrected. The proposed system, named CorrectSpeech, performs the correction in three steps: recognizing the recorded speech and converting it into time-stamped symbol sequence, aligning recognized symbol sequence with target text to determine locations and types of required edit operations, and generating the corrected speech. Experiments show that the quality and naturalness of corrected speech depend on the performance of speech recognition and alignment modules, as well as the granularity level of editing operations. The proposed system is evaluated on two corpora: a manually perturbed version of VCTK and L2-ARCTIC. The results demonstrate that our system is able to correct mispronunciation and reduce accent in speech recordings. Audio samples are available online for demonstration https://daxintan-cuhk.github.io/CorrectSpeech/ .

35.3CLMay 7
Minimizing Modality Gap from the Input Side: Your Speech LLM Can Be a Prosody-Aware Text LLM

Wenqian Cui, Xiao-Hui Li, Daxin Tan et al.

Speech large language models (SLMs) are typically built from text large language model (TLM) checkpoints, yet they still suffer from a substantial modality gap. Prior work has mainly attempted to reduce this gap from the output side by making speech generation more text-like, but the gap remains. We argue that the key remaining bottleneck lies on the input side. We propose TextPro-SLM, an SLM that makes spoken input more closely resemble that of a prosody-aware text LLM. TextPro-SLM combines WhisperPro, a unified speech encoder that produces synchronized text tokens and prosody embeddings, with an LLM backbone trained to preserve the semantic capabilities of the original TLM while learning paralinguistic understanding. Experiments show that TextPro-SLM achieves the lowest modality gap among leading SLMs at both 3B and 7B scales, while also delivering strong overall performance on paralinguistic understanding tasks. These gains are achieved with only roughly 1,000 hours of LLM training audio, suggesting that reducing the modality gap from the input side is both effective and data-efficient.

CLSep 13, 2024
Exploring SSL Discrete Tokens for Multilingual ASR

Mingyu Cui, Daxin Tan, Yifan Yang et al.

With the advancement of Self-supervised Learning (SSL) in speech-related tasks, there has been growing interest in utilizing discrete tokens generated by SSL for automatic speech recognition (ASR), as they offer faster processing techniques. However, previous studies primarily focused on multilingual ASR with Fbank features or English ASR with discrete tokens, leaving a gap in adapting discrete tokens for multilingual ASR scenarios. This study presents a comprehensive comparison of discrete tokens generated by various leading SSL models across multiple language domains. We aim to explore the performance and efficiency of speech discrete tokens across multiple language domains for both monolingual and multilingual ASR scenarios. Experimental results demonstrate that discrete tokens achieve comparable results against systems trained on Fbank features in ASR tasks across seven language domains with an average word error rate (WER) reduction of 0.31% and 1.76% absolute (2.80% and 15.70% relative) on dev and test sets respectively, with particularly WER reduction of 6.82% absolute (41.48% relative) on the Polish test set.

CLJan 15
AEQ-Bench: Measuring Empathy of Omni-Modal Large Models

Xuan Luo, Lewei Yao, Libo Zhao et al.

While the automatic evaluation of omni-modal large models (OLMs) is essential, assessing empathy remains a significant challenge due to its inherent affectivity. To investigate this challenge, we introduce AEQ-Bench (Audio Empathy Quotient Benchmark), a novel benchmark to systematically assess two core empathetic capabilities of OLMs: (i) generating empathetic responses by comprehending affective cues from multi-modal inputs (audio + text), and (ii) judging the empathy of audio responses without relying on text transcription. Compared to existing benchmarks, AEQ-Bench incorporates two novel settings that vary in context specificity and speech tone. Comprehensive assessment across linguistic and paralinguistic metrics reveals that (1) OLMs trained with audio output capabilities generally outperformed models with text-only outputs, and (2) while OLMs align with human judgments for coarse-grained quality assessment, they remain unreliable for evaluating fine-grained paralinguistic expressiveness.

CLJan 23
PROST-LLM: Progressively Enhancing the Speech-to-Speech Translation Capability in LLMs

Jing Xu, Jiaqi Wang, Daxin Tan et al.

Although Large Language Models (LLMs) excel in many tasks, their application to Speech-to-Speech Translation (S2ST) is underexplored and hindered by data scarcity. To bridge this gap, we propose PROST-LLM (PROgressive Speech-to-speech Translation) to enhance the S2ST capabilities in LLMs progressively. First, we fine-tune the LLMs with the CVSS corpus, employing designed tri-task learning and chain of modality methods to boost the initial performance. Then, leveraging the fine-tuned model, we generate preference pairs through self-sampling and back-translation without human evaluation. Finally, these preference pairs are used for preference optimization to enhance the model's S2ST capability further. Extensive experiments confirm the effectiveness of our proposed PROST-LLM in improving the S2ST capability of LLMs.

ASSep 17, 2024
Enhancing Code-switched Text-to-Speech Synthesis Capability in Large Language Models with only Monolingual Corpora

Jing Xu, Daxin Tan, Jiaqi Wang et al.

While Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown potential in speech generation and recognition, their applications are mainly confined to monolingual scenarios, with limited explorations in code-switched (CS) contexts. In this paper, we propose a Code-Switched Large Language Model (CS-LLM) to enhance the code-switched text-to-speech synthesis (CS TTS) capability in LLMs with only monolingual corpora. Specifically, we begin by enhancing the multilingual speech processing ability of LLMs through multilingual speech recognition and synthesis tasks. Then, we develop an effective code-switched (CS) data construction strategy that splits and concatenates words from different monolingual speech corpora to equip LLMs with improved CS TTS ability. Experiments show that our approach outperforms baselines in CS TTS in terms of naturalness, speaker consistency and similarity even with limited data. Additionally, the constructed CS data further improves multilingual speech synthesis and recognition.

ASMar 31, 2022
Mixed-Phoneme BERT: Improving BERT with Mixed Phoneme and Sup-Phoneme Representations for Text to Speech

Guangyan Zhang, Kaitao Song, Xu Tan et al.

Recently, leveraging BERT pre-training to improve the phoneme encoder in text to speech (TTS) has drawn increasing attention. However, the works apply pre-training with character-based units to enhance the TTS phoneme encoder, which is inconsistent with the TTS fine-tuning that takes phonemes as input. Pre-training only with phonemes as input can alleviate the input mismatch but lack the ability to model rich representations and semantic information due to limited phoneme vocabulary. In this paper, we propose MixedPhoneme BERT, a novel variant of the BERT model that uses mixed phoneme and sup-phoneme representations to enhance the learning capability. Specifically, we merge the adjacent phonemes into sup-phonemes and combine the phoneme sequence and the merged sup-phoneme sequence as the model input, which can enhance the model capacity to learn rich contextual representations. Experiment results demonstrate that our proposed Mixed-Phoneme BERT significantly improves the TTS performance with 0.30 CMOS gain compared with the FastSpeech 2 baseline. The Mixed-Phoneme BERT achieves 3x inference speedup and similar voice quality to the previous TTS pre-trained model PnG BERT

ASOct 8, 2021
Environment Aware Text-to-Speech Synthesis

Daxin Tan, Guangyan Zhang, Tan Lee

This study aims at designing an environment-aware text-to-speech (TTS) system that can generate speech to suit specific acoustic environments. It is also motivated by the desire to leverage massive data of speech audio from heterogeneous sources in TTS system development. The key idea is to model the acoustic environment in speech audio as a factor of data variability and incorporate it as a condition in the process of neural network based speech synthesis. Two embedding extractors are trained with two purposely constructed datasets for characterization and disentanglement of speaker and environment factors in speech. A neural network model is trained to generate speech from extracted speaker and environment embeddings. Objective and subjective evaluation results demonstrate that the proposed TTS system is able to effectively disentangle speaker and environment factors and synthesize speech audio that carries designated speaker characteristics and environment attribute. Audio samples are available online for demonstration https://daxintan-cuhk.github.io/Environment-Aware-TTS/ .

ASOct 8, 2021
A study on the efficacy of model pre-training in developing neural text-to-speech system

Guangyan Zhang, Yichong Leng, Daxin Tan et al.

In the development of neural text-to-speech systems, model pre-training with a large amount of non-target speakers' data is a common approach. However, in terms of ultimately achieved system performance for target speaker(s), the actual benefits of model pre-training are uncertain and unstable, depending very much on the quantity and text content of training data. This study aims to understand better why and how model pre-training can positively contribute to TTS system performance. It is postulated that the pre-training process plays a critical role in learning text-related variation in speech, while further training with the target speaker's data aims to capture the speaker-related variation. Different test sets are created with varying degrees of similarity to target speaker data in terms of text content. Experiments show that leveraging a speaker-independent TTS trained on speech data with diverse text content can improve the target speaker TTS on domain-mismatched text. We also attempt to reduce the amount of pre-training data for a new text domain and improve the data and computational efficiency. It is found that the TTS system could achieve comparable performance when the pre-training data is reduced to 1/8 of its original size.

ASAug 5, 2021
Applying the Information Bottleneck Principle to Prosodic Representation Learning

Guangyan Zhang, Ying Qin, Daxin Tan et al.

This paper describes a novel design of a neural network-based speech generation model for learning prosodic representation.The problem of representation learning is formulated according to the information bottleneck (IB) principle. A modified VQ-VAE quantized layer is incorporated in the speech generation model to control the IB capacity and adjust the balance between reconstruction power and disentangle capability of the learned representation. The proposed model is able to learn word-level prosodic representations from speech data. With an optimized IB capacity, the learned representations not only are adequate to reconstruct the original speech but also can be used to transfer the prosody onto different textual content. Extensive results of the objective and subjective evaluation are presented to demonstrate the effect of IB capacity control, the effectiveness, and potential usage of the learned prosodic representation in controllable neural speech generation.

ASJul 4, 2021
EditSpeech: A Text Based Speech Editing System Using Partial Inference and Bidirectional Fusion

Daxin Tan, Liqun Deng, Yu Ting Yeung et al.

This paper presents the design, implementation and evaluation of a speech editing system, named EditSpeech, which allows a user to perform deletion, insertion and replacement of words in a given speech utterance, without causing audible degradation in speech quality and naturalness. The EditSpeech system is developed upon a neural text-to-speech (NTTS) synthesis framework. Partial inference and bidirectional fusion are proposed to effectively incorporate the contextual information related to the edited region and achieve smooth transition at both left and right boundaries. Distortion introduced to the unmodified parts of the utterance is alleviated. The EditSpeech system is developed and evaluated on English and Chinese in multi-speaker scenarios. Objective and subjective evaluation demonstrate that EditSpeech outperforms a few baseline systems in terms of low spectral distortion and preferred speech quality. Audio samples are available online for demonstration https://daxintan-cuhk.github.io/EditSpeech/ .

ASMar 8, 2021
CUHK-EE Voice Cloning System for ICASSP 2021 M2VoC Challenge

Daxin Tan, Hingpang Huang, Guangyan Zhang et al.

This paper presents the CUHK-EE voice cloning system for ICASSP 2021 M2VoC challenge. The challenge provides two Mandarin speech corpora: the AIShell-3 corpus of 218 speakers with noise and reverberation and the MST corpus including high-quality speech of one male and one female speakers. 100 and 5 utterances of 3 target speakers in different voice and style are provided in track 1 and 2 respectively, and the participants are required to synthesize speech in target speaker's voice and style. We take part in the track 1 and carry out voice cloning based on 100 utterances of target speakers. An end-to-end voicing cloning system is developed to accomplish the task, which includes: 1. a text and speech front-end module with the help of forced alignment, 2. an acoustic model combining Tacotron2 and DurIAN to predict melspectrogram, 3. a Hifigan vocoder for waveform generation. Our system comprises three stages: multi-speaker training stage, target speaker adaption stage and target speaker synthesis stage. Our team is identified as T17. The subjective evaluation results provided by the challenge organizer demonstrate the effectiveness of our system. Audio samples are available at our demo page: https://daxintan-cuhk.github.io/CUHK-EE-system-M2VoC-challenge/ .

ASNov 8, 2020
Fine-grained Style Modeling, Transfer and Prediction in Text-to-Speech Synthesis via Phone-Level Content-Style Disentanglement

Daxin Tan, Tan Lee

This paper presents a novel design of neural network system for fine-grained style modeling, transfer and prediction in expressive text-to-speech (TTS) synthesis. Fine-grained modeling is realized by extracting style embeddings from the mel-spectrograms of phone-level speech segments. Collaborative learning and adversarial learning strategies are applied in order to achieve effective disentanglement of content and style factors in speech and alleviate the "content leakage" problem in style modeling. The proposed system can be used for varying-content speech style transfer in the single-speaker scenario. The results of objective and subjective evaluation show that our system performs better than other fine-grained speech style transfer models, especially in the aspect of content preservation. By incorporating a style predictor, the proposed system can also be used for text-to-speech synthesis. Audio samples are provided for system demonstration https://daxintan-cuhk.github.io/pl-csd-speech .