Yuhao Liang

SD
4papers
118citations
Novelty35%
AI Score41

4 Papers

86.6CVMar 18Code
VisBrowse-Bench: Benchmarking Visual-Native Search for Multimodal Browsing Agents

Zhengbo Zhang, Jinbo Su, Zhaowen Zhou et al.

The rapid advancement of Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) has enabled browsing agents to acquire and reason over multimodal information in the real world. But existing benchmarks suffer from two limitations: insufficient evaluation of visual reasoning ability and the neglect of native visual information of web pages in the reasoning chains. To address these challenges, we introduce a new benchmark for visual-native search, VisBrowse-Bench. It contains 169 VQA instances covering multiple domains and evaluates the models' visual reasoning capabilities during the search process through multimodal evidence cross-validation via text-image retrieval and joint reasoning. These data were constructed by human experts using a multi-stage pipeline and underwent rigorous manual verification. We additionally propose an agent workflow that can effectively drive the browsing agent to actively collect and reason over visual information during the search process. We comprehensively evaluated both open-source and closed-source models in this workflow. Experimental results show that even the best-performing model, Claude-4.6-Opus only achieves an accuracy of 47.6%, while the proprietary Deep Research model, o3-deep-research only achieves an accuracy of 41.1%. The code and data can be accessed at: https://github.com/ZhengboZhang/VisBrowse-Bench

SDApr 10, 2021Code
Boundary and Context Aware Training for CIF-based Non-Autoregressive End-to-end ASR

Fan Yu, Haoneng Luo, Pengcheng Guo et al.

Continuous integrate-and-fire (CIF) based models, which use a soft and monotonic alignment mechanism, have been well applied in non-autoregressive (NAR) speech recognition with competitive performance compared with other NAR methods. However, such an alignment learning strategy may suffer from an erroneous acoustic boundary estimation, severely hindering the convergence speed as well as the system performance. In this paper, we propose a boundary and context aware training approach for CIF based NAR models. Firstly, the connectionist temporal classification (CTC) spike information is utilized to guide the learning of acoustic boundaries in the CIF. Besides, an additional contextual decoder is introduced behind the CIF decoder, aiming to capture the linguistic dependencies within a sentence. Finally, we adopt a recently proposed Conformer architecture to improve the capacity of acoustic modeling. Experiments on the open-source Mandarin AISHELL-1 corpus show that the proposed method achieves a comparable character error rates (CERs) of 4.9% with only 1/24 latency compared with a state-of-the-art autoregressive (AR) Conformer model. Futhermore, when evaluating on an internal 7500 hours Mandarin corpus, our model still outperforms other NAR methods and even reaches the AR Conformer model on a challenging real-world noisy test set.

SDMay 23, 2023
BA-SOT: Boundary-Aware Serialized Output Training for Multi-Talker ASR

Yuhao Liang, Fan Yu, Yangze Li et al.

The recently proposed serialized output training (SOT) simplifies multi-talker automatic speech recognition (ASR) by generating speaker transcriptions separated by a special token. However, frequent speaker changes can make speaker change prediction difficult. To address this, we propose boundary-aware serialized output training (BA-SOT), which explicitly incorporates boundary knowledge into the decoder via a speaker change detection task and boundary constraint loss. We also introduce a two-stage connectionist temporal classification (CTC) strategy that incorporates token-level SOT CTC to restore temporal context information. Besides typical character error rate (CER), we introduce utterance-dependent character error rate (UD-CER) to further measure the precision of speaker change prediction. Compared to original SOT, BA-SOT reduces CER/UD-CER by 5.1%/14.0%, and leveraging a pre-trained ASR model for BA-SOT model initialization further reduces CER/UD-CER by 8.4%/19.9%.

SDFeb 20, 2021
The Accented English Speech Recognition Challenge 2020: Open Datasets, Tracks, Baselines, Results and Methods

Xian Shi, Fan Yu, Yizhou Lu et al.

The variety of accents has posed a big challenge to speech recognition. The Accented English Speech Recognition Challenge (AESRC2020) is designed for providing a common testbed and promoting accent-related research. Two tracks are set in the challenge -- English accent recognition (track 1) and accented English speech recognition (track 2). A set of 160 hours of accented English speech collected from 8 countries is released with labels as the training set. Another 20 hours of speech without labels is later released as the test set, including two unseen accents from another two countries used to test the model generalization ability in track 2. We also provide baseline systems for the participants. This paper first reviews the released dataset, track setups, baselines and then summarizes the challenge results and major techniques used in the submissions.