CLOct 18, 2022Code
Towards Personalization of CTC Speech Recognition Models with Contextual Adapters and Adaptive BoostingSaket Dingliwal, Monica Sunkara, Sravan Bodapati et al.
End-to-end speech recognition models trained using joint Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC)-Attention loss have gained popularity recently. In these models, a non-autoregressive CTC decoder is often used at inference time due to its speed and simplicity. However, such models are hard to personalize because of their conditional independence assumption that prevents output tokens from previous time steps to influence future predictions. To tackle this, we propose a novel two-way approach that first biases the encoder with attention over a predefined list of rare long-tail and out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words and then uses dynamic boosting and phone alignment network during decoding to further bias the subword predictions. We evaluate our approach on open-source VoxPopuli and in-house medical datasets to showcase a 60% improvement in F1 score on domain-specific rare words over a strong CTC baseline.
ASMay 5, 2023
Mask The Bias: Improving Domain-Adaptive Generalization of CTC-based ASR with Internal Language Model EstimationNilaksh Das, Monica Sunkara, Sravan Bodapati et al.
End-to-end ASR models trained on large amount of data tend to be implicitly biased towards language semantics of the training data. Internal language model estimation (ILME) has been proposed to mitigate this bias for autoregressive models such as attention-based encoder-decoder and RNN-T. Typically, ILME is performed by modularizing the acoustic and language components of the model architecture, and eliminating the acoustic input to perform log-linear interpolation with the text-only posterior. However, for CTC-based ASR, it is not as straightforward to decouple the model into such acoustic and language components, as CTC log-posteriors are computed in a non-autoregressive manner. In this work, we propose a novel ILME technique for CTC-based ASR models. Our method iteratively masks the audio timesteps to estimate a pseudo log-likelihood of the internal LM by accumulating log-posteriors for only the masked timesteps. Extensive evaluation across multiple out-of-domain datasets reveals that the proposed approach improves WER by up to 9.8% and OOV F1-score by up to 24.6% relative to Shallow Fusion, when only text data from target domain is available. In the case of zero-shot domain adaptation, with no access to any target domain data, we demonstrate that removing the source domain bias with ILME can still outperform Shallow Fusion to improve WER by up to 9.3% relative.