Ryan Price

CL
3papers
6citations
Novelty37%
AI Score19

3 Papers

CLApr 20, 2022
Cross-stitched Multi-modal Encoders

Karan Singla, Daniel Pressel, Ryan Price et al. · amazon-science

In this paper, we propose a novel architecture for multi-modal speech and text input. We combine pretrained speech and text encoders using multi-headed cross-modal attention and jointly fine-tune on the target problem. The resultant architecture can be used for continuous token-level classification or utterance-level prediction acting on simultaneous text and speech. The resultant encoder efficiently captures both acoustic-prosodic and lexical information. We compare the benefits of multi-headed attention-based fusion for multi-modal utterance-level classification against a simple concatenation of pre-pooled, modality-specific representations. Our model architecture is compact, resource efficient, and can be trained on a single consumer GPU card.

CLMar 16, 2023
Trustera: A Live Conversation Redaction System

Evandro Gouvêa, Ali Dadgar, Shahab Jalalvand et al.

Trustera, the first functional system that redacts personally identifiable information (PII) in real-time spoken conversations to remove agents' need to hear sensitive information while preserving the naturalness of live customer-agent conversations. As opposed to post-call redaction, audio masking starts as soon as the customer begins speaking to a PII entity. This significantly reduces the risk of PII being intercepted or stored in insecure data storage. Trustera's architecture consists of a pipeline of automatic speech recognition, natural language understanding, and a live audio redactor module. The system's goal is three-fold: redact entities that are PII, mask the audio that goes to the agent, and at the same time capture the entity, so that the captured PII can be used for a payment transaction or caller identification. Trustera is currently being used by thousands of agents to secure customers' sensitive information.

CLMar 29, 2022
Seq-2-Seq based Refinement of ASR Output for Spoken Name Capture

Karan Singla, Shahab Jalalvand, Yeon-Jun Kim et al.

Person name capture from human speech is a difficult task in human-machine conversations. In this paper, we propose a novel approach to capture the person names from the caller utterances in response to the prompt "say and spell your first/last name". Inspired from work on spell correction, disfluency removal and text normalization, we propose a lightweight Seq-2-Seq system which generates a name spell from a varying user input. Our proposed method outperforms the strong baseline which is based on LM-driven rule-based approach.