Javier Latorre

CL
5papers
857citations
Novelty54%
AI Score34

5 Papers

CLAug 22, 2024
Positional Description for Numerical Normalization

Deepanshu Gupta, Javier Latorre

We present a Positional Description Scheme (PDS) tailored for digit sequences, integrating placeholder value information for each digit. Given the structural limitations of subword tokenization algorithms, language models encounter critical Text Normalization (TN) challenges when handling numerical tasks. Our schema addresses this challenge through straightforward pre-processing, preserving the model architecture while significantly simplifying number normalization, rendering the problem tractable. This simplifies the task and facilitates more compact production-ready models capable of learning from smaller datasets. Furthermore, our investigations reveal that PDS enhances the arithmetic processing capabilities of language models, resulting in a relative accuracy improvement of 23% to 51% on complex arithmetic tasks. We demonstrate that PDS effectively mitigates fatal numerical normalization errors in neural models, requiring only a modest amount of training data without rule-based Finite State Transducers (FST). We demonstrate that PDS is essential for both the Text-To-Speech and Speech Recognition text processing, enabling effective TN under production constraints.

CLApr 15, 2021Code
Proteno: Text Normalization with Limited Data for Fast Deployment in Text to Speech Systems

Shubhi Tyagi, Antonio Bonafonte, Jaime Lorenzo-Trueba et al.

Developing Text Normalization (TN) systems for Text-to-Speech (TTS) on new languages is hard. We propose a novel architecture to facilitate it for multiple languages while using data less than 3% of the size of the data used by the state of the art results on English. We treat TN as a sequence classification problem and propose a granular tokenization mechanism that enables the system to learn majority of the classes and their normalizations from the training data itself. This is further combined with minimal precoded linguistic knowledge for other classes. We publish the first results on TN for TTS in Spanish and Tamil and also demonstrate that the performance of the approach is comparable with the previous work done on English. All annotated datasets used for experimentation will be released at https://github.com/amazon-research/proteno.

CLAug 17, 2021
Combining speakers of multiple languages to improve quality of neural voices

Javier Latorre, Charlotte Bailleul, Tuuli Morrill et al.

In this work, we explore multiple architectures and training procedures for developing a multi-speaker and multi-lingual neural TTS system with the goals of a) improving the quality when the available data in the target language is limited and b) enabling cross-lingual synthesis. We report results from a large experiment using 30 speakers in 8 different languages across 15 different locales. The system is trained on the same amount of data per speaker. Compared to a single-speaker model, when the suggested system is fine tuned to a speaker, it produces significantly better quality in most of the cases while it only uses less than $40\%$ of the speaker's data used to build the single-speaker model. In cross-lingual synthesis, on average, the generated quality is within $80\%$ of native single-speaker models, in terms of Mean Opinion Score.

CLNov 15, 2018
Effect of data reduction on sequence-to-sequence neural TTS

Javier Latorre, Jakub Lachowicz, Jaime Lorenzo-Trueba et al.

Recent speech synthesis systems based on sampling from autoregressive neural networks models can generate speech almost undistinguishable from human recordings. However, these models require large amounts of data. This paper shows that the lack of data from one speaker can be compensated with data from other speakers. The naturalness of Tacotron2-like models trained on a blend of 5k utterances from 7 speakers is better than that of speaker dependent models trained on 15k utterances, but in terms of stability multi-speaker models are always more stable. We also demonstrate that models mixing only 1250 utterances from a target speaker with 5k utterances from another 6 speakers can produce significantly better quality than state-of-the-art DNN-guided unit selection systems trained on more than 10 times the data from the target speaker.

ASNov 15, 2018
Towards achieving robust universal neural vocoding

Jaime Lorenzo-Trueba, Thomas Drugman, Javier Latorre et al.

This paper explores the potential universality of neural vocoders. We train a WaveRNN-based vocoder on 74 speakers coming from 17 languages. This vocoder is shown to be capable of generating speech of consistently good quality (98% relative mean MUSHRA when compared to natural speech) regardless of whether the input spectrogram comes from a speaker or style seen during training or from an out-of-domain scenario when the recording conditions are studio-quality. When the recordings show significant changes in quality, or when moving towards non-speech vocalizations or singing, the vocoder still significantly outperforms speaker-dependent vocoders, but operates at a lower average relative MUSHRA of 75%. These results are shown to be consistent across languages, regardless of them being seen during training (e.g. English or Japanese) or unseen (e.g. Wolof, Swahili, Ahmaric).