Asaf Buchnick

SD
h-index27
3papers
9citations
Novelty48%
AI Score43

3 Papers

SDJun 11, 2025
UmbraTTS: Adapting Text-to-Speech to Environmental Contexts with Flow Matching

Neta Glazer, Aviv Navon, Yael Segal et al.

Recent advances in Text-to-Speech (TTS) have enabled highly natural speech synthesis, yet integrating speech with complex background environments remains challenging. We introduce UmbraTTS, a flow-matching based TTS model that jointly generates both speech and environmental audio, conditioned on text and acoustic context. Our model allows fine-grained control over background volume and produces diverse, coherent, and context-aware audio scenes. A key challenge is the lack of data with speech and background audio aligned in natural context. To overcome the lack of paired training data, we propose a self-supervised framework that extracts speech, background audio, and transcripts from unannotated recordings. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that UmbraTTS significantly outperformed existing baselines, producing natural, high-quality, environmentally aware audios.

85.6LGApr 3
PromptEvolver: Prompt Inversion through Evolutionary Optimization in Natural-Language Space

Asaf Buchnick, Aviv Shamsian, Aviv Navon et al.

Text-to-image generation has progressed rapidly, but faithfully generating complex scenes requires extensive trial-and-error to find the exact prompt. In the prompt inversion task, the goal is to recover a textual prompt that can faithfully reconstruct a given target image. Currently, existing methods frequently yield suboptimal reconstructions and produce unnatural, hard-to-interpret prompts that hinder transparency and controllability. In this work, we present PromptEvolver, a prompt inversion approach that generates natural-language prompts while achieving high-fidelity reconstructions of the target image. Our method uses a genetic algorithm to optimize the prompt, leveraging a strong vision-language model to guide the evolution process. Importantly, it works on black-box generation models by requiring only image outputs. Finally, we evaluate PromptEvolver across multiple prompt inversion benchmarks and show that it consistently outperforms competing methods.

SDAug 21, 2025
Beyond Transcription: Mechanistic Interpretability in ASR

Neta Glazer, Yael Segal-Feldman, Hilit Segev et al.

Interpretability methods have recently gained significant attention, particularly in the context of large language models, enabling insights into linguistic representations, error detection, and model behaviors such as hallucinations and repetitions. However, these techniques remain underexplored in automatic speech recognition (ASR), despite their potential to advance both the performance and interpretability of ASR systems. In this work, we adapt and systematically apply established interpretability methods such as logit lens, linear probing, and activation patching, to examine how acoustic and semantic information evolves across layers in ASR systems. Our experiments reveal previously unknown internal dynamics, including specific encoder-decoder interactions responsible for repetition hallucinations and semantic biases encoded deep within acoustic representations. These insights demonstrate the benefits of extending and applying interpretability techniques to speech recognition, opening promising directions for future research on improving model transparency and robustness.