LGSep 21, 2023
Variational Connectionist Temporal Classification for Order-Preserving Sequence ModelingZheng Nan, Ting Dang, Vidhyasaharan Sethu et al.
Connectionist temporal classification (CTC) is commonly adopted for sequence modeling tasks like speech recognition, where it is necessary to preserve order between the input and target sequences. However, CTC is only applied to deterministic sequence models, where the latent space is discontinuous and sparse, which in turn makes them less capable of handling data variability when compared to variational models. In this paper, we integrate CTC with a variational model and derive loss functions that can be used to train more generalizable sequence models that preserve order. Specifically, we derive two versions of the novel variational CTC based on two reasonable assumptions, the first being that the variational latent variables at each time step are conditionally independent; and the second being that these latent variables are Markovian. We show that both loss functions allow direct optimization of the variational lower bound for the model log-likelihood, and present computationally tractable forms for implementing them.
ASSep 17, 2024
A Joint Spectro-Temporal Relational Thinking Based Acoustic Modeling FrameworkZheng Nan, Ting Dang, Vidhyasaharan Sethu et al.
Relational thinking refers to the inherent ability of humans to form mental impressions about relations between sensory signals and prior knowledge, and subsequently incorporate them into their model of their world. Despite the crucial role relational thinking plays in human understanding of speech, it has yet to be leveraged in any artificial speech recognition systems. Recently, there have been some attempts to correct this oversight, but these have been limited to coarse utterance-level models that operate exclusively in the time domain. In an attempt to narrow the gap between artificial systems and human abilities, this paper presents a novel spectro-temporal relational thinking based acoustic modeling framework. Specifically, it first generates numerous probabilistic graphs to model the relationships among speech segments across both time and frequency domains. The relational information rooted in every pair of nodes within these graphs is then aggregated and embedded into latent representations that can be utilized by downstream tasks. Models built upon this framework outperform state-of-the-art systems with a 7.82\% improvement in phoneme recognition tasks over the TIMIT dataset. In-depth analyses further reveal that our proposed relational thinking modeling mainly improves the model's ability to recognize vowels, which are the most likely to be confused by phoneme recognizers.