47.2SDMar 26Code
CoDeTT: A Context-Aware Decision Benchmark for Turn-Taking EvaluationHuan Shen, Yingao Wang, Shangkun Huang et al.
Turn-taking modeling is fundamental to spoken dialogue systems, yet its evaluation remains fragmented and often limited to binary boundary detection under narrow interaction settings. Such protocols hinder systematic comparison and obscure model weaknesses across conversational conditions. We present CoDeTT, a context-aware decision benchmark for turn-taking evaluation. CoDeTT formulates turn-taking as a structured decision problem and constructs a multi-scenario dataset with fine-grained decision categories and controlled context variations. Under a unified evaluation protocol, we assess representative existing models and observe substantial performance disparities across decision types and interaction scenarios. CoDeTT provides a standardized benchmark for systematic and context-aware evaluation of turn-taking systems. The benchmark dataset and evaluation toolkit are available at https://github.com/YingaoWang-casia/CoDeTT.github.io.
48.7SDMar 26
CLAR: CIF-Localized Alignment for Retrieval-Augmented Speech LLM-Based Contextual ASRShangkun Huang, Huan Shen, Wei Zou et al.
Speech LLM-based ASR often struggles with named entities and long-tail words due to strong internal language-model priors. Retrieval-augmented biasing can help, but its effectiveness depends on accurate hotword localization in full-utterance speech under weak supervision. We propose CLAR, a dual-encoder speech-text retriever that uses Continuous Integrate-and-Fire (CIF) to learn monotonic token-level alignments without timestamps. With length-aware localized matching, CLAR anchors short-entity acoustic cues and reduces representation dilution and attention drift. The retriever is trained with a multi-granularity objective combining global and local segment-level contrastive losses and a CIF quantity constraint. At inference, top-ranked hotwords are injected as contextual prompts for the Speech LLM, improving recognition without shallow fusion. Experiments show that CLAR significantly improves hotword retrieval and reduces both CER and B-WER against strong contextual ASR baselines.