Li-Rong Dai

SD
h-index7
19papers
840citations
Novelty52%
AI Score34

19 Papers

SDApr 5, 2022
A Complementary Joint Training Approach Using Unpaired Speech and Text for Low-Resource Automatic Speech Recognition

Ye-Qian Du, Jie Zhang, Qiu-Shi Zhu et al.

Unpaired data has shown to be beneficial for low-resource automatic speech recognition~(ASR), which can be involved in the design of hybrid models with multi-task training or language model dependent pre-training. In this work, we leverage unpaired data to train a general sequence-to-sequence model. Unpaired speech and text are used in the form of data pairs by generating the corresponding missing parts in prior to model training. Inspired by the complementarity of speech-PseudoLabel pair and SynthesizedAudio-text pair in both acoustic features and linguistic features, we propose a complementary joint training~(CJT) method that trains a model alternatively with two data pairs. Furthermore, label masking for pseudo-labels and gradient restriction for synthesized audio are proposed to further cope with the deviations from real data, termed as CJT++. Experimental results show that compared to speech-only training, the proposed basic CJT achieves great performance improvements on clean/other test sets, and the CJT++ re-training yields further performance enhancements. It is also apparent that the proposed method outperforms the wav2vec2.0 model with the same model size and beam size, particularly in extreme low-resource cases.

CVDec 12, 2023Code
Adaptive Confidence Multi-View Hashing for Multimedia Retrieval

Jian Zhu, Yu Cui, Zhangmin Huang et al.

The multi-view hash method converts heterogeneous data from multiple views into binary hash codes, which is one of the critical technologies in multimedia retrieval. However, the current methods mainly explore the complementarity among multiple views while lacking confidence learning and fusion. Moreover, in practical application scenarios, the single-view data contain redundant noise. To conduct the confidence learning and eliminate unnecessary noise, we propose a novel Adaptive Confidence Multi-View Hashing (ACMVH) method. First, a confidence network is developed to extract useful information from various single-view features and remove noise information. Furthermore, an adaptive confidence multi-view network is employed to measure the confidence of each view and then fuse multi-view features through a weighted summation. Lastly, a dilation network is designed to further enhance the feature representation of the fused features. To the best of our knowledge, we pioneer the application of confidence learning into the field of multimedia retrieval. Extensive experiments on two public datasets show that the proposed ACMVH performs better than state-of-the-art methods (maximum increase of 3.24%). The source code is available at https://github.com/HackerHyper/ACMVH.

CVDec 21, 2024Code
Trusted Mamba Contrastive Network for Multi-View Clustering

Jian Zhu, Xin Zou, Lei Liu et al.

Multi-view clustering can partition data samples into their categories by learning a consensus representation in an unsupervised way and has received more and more attention in recent years. However, there is an untrusted fusion problem. The reasons for this problem are as follows: 1) The current methods ignore the presence of noise or redundant information in the view; 2) The similarity of contrastive learning comes from the same sample rather than the same cluster in deep multi-view clustering. It causes multi-view fusion in the wrong direction. This paper proposes a novel multi-view clustering network to address this problem, termed as Trusted Mamba Contrastive Network (TMCN). Specifically, we present a new Trusted Mamba Fusion Network (TMFN), which achieves a trusted fusion of multi-view data through a selective mechanism. Moreover, we align the fused representation and the view-specific representation using the Average-similarity Contrastive Learning (AsCL) module. AsCL increases the similarity of view presentation from the same cluster, not merely from the same sample. Extensive experiments show that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art results in deep multi-view clustering tasks. The source code is available at https://github.com/HackerHyper/TMCN.

IVFeb 15, 2022
Learning Contextually Fused Audio-visual Representations for Audio-visual Speech Recognition

Zi-Qiang Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jian-Shu Zhang et al.

With the advance in self-supervised learning for audio and visual modalities, it has become possible to learn a robust audio-visual speech representation. This would be beneficial for improving the audio-visual speech recognition (AVSR) performance, as the multi-modal inputs contain more fruitful information in principle. In this paper, based on existing self-supervised representation learning methods for audio modality, we therefore propose an audio-visual representation learning approach. The proposed approach explores both the complementarity of audio-visual modalities and long-term context dependency using a transformer-based fusion module and a flexible masking strategy. After pre-training, the model is able to extract fused representations required by AVSR. Without loss of generality, it can be applied to single-modal tasks, e.g. audio/visual speech recognition by simply masking out one modality in the fusion module. The proposed pre-trained model is evaluated on speech recognition and lipreading tasks using one or two modalities, where the superiority is revealed.

ASJan 22, 2022
Supervised and Self-supervised Pretraining Based COVID-19 Detection Using Acoustic Breathing/Cough/Speech Signals

Xing-Yu Chen, Qiu-Shi Zhu, Jie Zhang et al.

In this work, we propose a bi-directional long short-term memory (BiLSTM) network based COVID-19 detection method using breath/speech/cough signals. By using the acoustic signals to train the network, respectively, we can build individual models for three tasks, whose parameters are averaged to obtain an average model, which is then used as the initialization for the BiLSTM model training of each task. This initialization method can significantly improve the performance on the three tasks, which surpasses the official baseline results. Besides, we also utilize a public pre-trained model wav2vec2.0 and pre-train it using the official DiCOVA datasets. This wav2vec2.0 model is utilized to extract high-level features of the sound as the model input to replace conventional mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCC) features. Experimental results reveal that using high-level features together with MFCC features can improve the performance. To further improve the performance, we also deploy some preprocessing techniques like silent segment removal, amplitude normalization and time-frequency mask. The proposed detection model is evaluated on the DiCOVA dataset and results show that our method achieves an area under curve (AUC) score of 88.44% on blind test in the fusion track.

ASJan 22, 2022
A Noise-Robust Self-supervised Pre-training Model Based Speech Representation Learning for Automatic Speech Recognition

Qiu-Shi Zhu, Jie Zhang, Zi-Qiang Zhang et al.

Wav2vec2.0 is a popular self-supervised pre-training framework for learning speech representations in the context of automatic speech recognition (ASR). It was shown that wav2vec2.0 has a good robustness against the domain shift, while the noise robustness is still unclear. In this work, we therefore first analyze the noise robustness of wav2vec2.0 via experiments. We observe that wav2vec2.0 pre-trained on noisy data can obtain good representations and thus improve the ASR performance on the noisy test set, which however brings a performance degradation on the clean test set. To avoid this issue, in this work we propose an enhanced wav2vec2.0 model. Specifically, the noisy speech and the corresponding clean version are fed into the same feature encoder, where the clean speech provides training targets for the model. Experimental results reveal that the proposed method can not only improve the ASR performance on the noisy test set which surpasses the original wav2vec2.0, but also ensure a tiny performance decrease on the clean test set. In addition, the effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated under different types of noise conditions.

ASMar 15, 2021
XLST: Cross-lingual Self-training to Learn Multilingual Representation for Low Resource Speech Recognition

Zi-Qiang Zhang, Yan Song, Ming-Hui Wu et al.

In this paper, we propose a weakly supervised multilingual representation learning framework, called cross-lingual self-training (XLST). XLST is able to utilize a small amount of annotated data from high-resource languages to improve the representation learning on multilingual un-annotated data. Specifically, XLST uses a supervised trained model to produce initial representations and another model to learn from them, by maximizing the similarity between output embeddings of these two models. Furthermore, the moving average mechanism and multi-view data augmentation are employed, which are experimentally shown to be crucial to XLST. Comprehensive experiments have been conducted on the CommonVoice corpus to evaluate the effectiveness of XLST. Results on 5 downstream low-resource ASR tasks shows that our multilingual pretrained model achieves relatively 18.6% PER reduction over the state-of-the-art self-supervised method, with leveraging additional 100 hours of annotated English data.

CVDec 28, 2020
Lip-reading with Hierarchical Pyramidal Convolution and Self-Attention

Hang Chen, Jun Du, Yu Hu et al.

In this paper, we propose a novel deep learning architecture to improving word-level lip-reading. On the one hand, we first introduce the multi-scale processing into the spatial feature extraction for lip-reading. Specially, we proposed hierarchical pyramidal convolution (HPConv) to replace the standard convolution in original module, leading to improvements over the model's ability to discover fine-grained lip movements. On the other hand, we merge information in all time steps of the sequence by utilizing self-attention, to make the model pay more attention to the relevant frames. These two advantages are combined together to further enhance the model's classification power. Experiments on the Lip Reading in the Wild (LRW) dataset show that our proposed model has achieved 86.83% accuracy, yielding 1.53% absolute improvement over the current state-of-the-art. We also conducted extensive experiments to better understand the behavior of the proposed model.

SDSep 21, 2020
Correlating Subword Articulation with Lip Shapes for Embedding Aware Audio-Visual Speech Enhancement

Hang Chen, Jun Du, Yu Hu et al.

In this paper, we propose a visual embedding approach to improving embedding aware speech enhancement (EASE) by synchronizing visual lip frames at the phone and place of articulation levels. We first extract visual embedding from lip frames using a pre-trained phone or articulation place recognizer for visual-only EASE (VEASE). Next, we extract audio-visual embedding from noisy speech and lip videos in an information intersection manner, utilizing a complementarity of audio and visual features for multi-modal EASE (MEASE). Experiments on the TCD-TIMIT corpus corrupted by simulated additive noises show that our proposed subword based VEASE approach is more effective than conventional embedding at the word level. Moreover, visual embedding at the articulation place level, leveraging upon a high correlation between place of articulation and lip shapes, shows an even better performance than that at the phone level. Finally the proposed MEASE framework, incorporating both audio and visual embedding, yields significantly better speech quality and intelligibility than those obtained with the best visual-only and audio-only EASE systems.

ASSep 3, 2020
Voice Conversion by Cascading Automatic Speech Recognition and Text-to-Speech Synthesis with Prosody Transfer

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Li-Juan Liu, Yan-Nian Chen et al.

With the development of automatic speech recognition (ASR) and text-to-speech synthesis (TTS) technique, it's intuitive to construct a voice conversion system by cascading an ASR and TTS system. In this paper, we present a ASR-TTS method for voice conversion, which used iFLYTEK ASR engine to transcribe the source speech into text and a Transformer TTS model with WaveNet vocoder to synthesize the converted speech from the decoded text. For the TTS model, we proposed to use a prosody code to describe the prosody information other than text and speaker information contained in speech. A prosody encoder is used to extract the prosody code. During conversion, the source prosody is transferred to converted speech by conditioning the Transformer TTS model with its code. Experiments were conducted to demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed method. Our system also obtained the best naturalness and similarity in the mono-lingual task of Voice Conversion Challenge 2020.

ASAug 5, 2020
Recognition-Synthesis Based Non-Parallel Voice Conversion with Adversarial Learning

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Zhen-Hua Ling, Li-Rong Dai

This paper presents an adversarial learning method for recognition-synthesis based non-parallel voice conversion. A recognizer is used to transform acoustic features into linguistic representations while a synthesizer recovers output features from the recognizer outputs together with the speaker identity. By separating the speaker characteristics from the linguistic representations, voice conversion can be achieved by replacing the speaker identity with the target one. In our proposed method, a speaker adversarial loss is adopted in order to obtain speaker-independent linguistic representations using the recognizer. Furthermore, discriminators are introduced and a generative adversarial network (GAN) loss is used to prevent the predicted features from being over-smoothed. For training model parameters, a strategy of pre-training on a multi-speaker dataset and then fine-tuning on the source-target speaker pair is designed. Our method achieved higher similarity than the baseline model that obtained the best performance in Voice Conversion Challenge 2018.

ASJun 26, 2019
End-to-End Emotional Speech Synthesis Using Style Tokens and Semi-Supervised Training

Peng-fei Wu, Zhen-hua Ling, Li-juan Liu et al.

This paper proposes an end-to-end emotional speech synthesis (ESS) method which adopts global style tokens (GSTs) for semi-supervised training. This model is built based on the GST-Tacotron framework. The style tokens are defined to present emotion categories. A cross entropy loss function between token weights and emotion labels is designed to obtain the interpretability of style tokens utilizing the small portion of training data with emotion labels. Emotion recognition experiments confirm that this method can achieve one-to-one correspondence between style tokens and emotion categories effectively. Objective and subjective evaluation results show that our model outperforms the conventional Tacotron model for ESS when only 5\% of training data has emotion labels. Its subjective performance is close to the Tacotron model trained using all emotion labels.

ASJun 25, 2019
Non-Parallel Sequence-to-Sequence Voice Conversion with Disentangled Linguistic and Speaker Representations

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Zhen-Hua Ling, Li-Rong Dai

This paper presents a method of sequence-to-sequence (seq2seq) voice conversion using non-parallel training data. In this method, disentangled linguistic and speaker representations are extracted from acoustic features, and voice conversion is achieved by preserving the linguistic representations of source utterances while replacing the speaker representations with the target ones. Our model is built under the framework of encoder-decoder neural networks. A recognition encoder is designed to learn the disentangled linguistic representations with two strategies. First, phoneme transcriptions of training data are introduced to provide the references for leaning linguistic representations of audio signals. Second, an adversarial training strategy is employed to further wipe out speaker information from the linguistic representations. Meanwhile, speaker representations are extracted from audio signals by a speaker encoder. The model parameters are estimated by two-stage training, including a pretraining stage using a multi-speaker dataset and a fine-tuning stage using the dataset of a specific conversion pair. Since both the recognition encoder and the decoder for recovering acoustic features are seq2seq neural networks, there are no constrains of frame alignment and frame-by-frame conversion in our proposed method. Experimental results showed that our method obtained higher similarity and naturalness than the best non-parallel voice conversion method in Voice Conversion Challenge 2018. Besides, the performance of our proposed method was closed to the state-of-the-art parallel seq2seq voice conversion method.

SDJun 21, 2019
Singing Voice Synthesis Using Deep Autoregressive Neural Networks for Acoustic Modeling

Yuan-Hao Yi, Yang Ai, Zhen-Hua Ling et al.

This paper presents a method of using autoregressive neural networks for the acoustic modeling of singing voice synthesis (SVS). Singing voice differs from speech and it contains more local dynamic movements of acoustic features, e.g., vibratos. Therefore, our method adopts deep autoregressive (DAR) models to predict the F0 and spectral features of singing voice in order to better describe the dependencies among the acoustic features of consecutive frames. For F0 modeling, discretized F0 values are used and the influences of the history length in DAR are analyzed by experiments. An F0 post-processing strategy is also designed to alleviate the inconsistency between the predicted F0 contours and the F0 values determined by music notes. Furthermore, we extend the DAR model to deal with continuous spectral features, and a prenet module with self-attention layers is introduced to process historical frames. Experiments on a Chinese singing voice corpus demonstrate that our method using DARs can produce F0 contours with vibratos effectively, and can achieve better objective and subjective performance than the conventional method using recurrent neural networks (RNNs).

SDNov 20, 2018
Improving Sequence-to-Sequence Acoustic Modeling by Adding Text-Supervision

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Zhen-Hua Ling, Yuan Jiang et al.

This paper presents methods of making using of text supervision to improve the performance of sequence-to-sequence (seq2seq) voice conversion. Compared with conventional frame-to-frame voice conversion approaches, the seq2seq acoustic modeling method proposed in our previous work achieved higher naturalness and similarity. In this paper, we further improve its performance by utilizing the text transcriptions of parallel training data. First, a multi-task learning structure is designed which adds auxiliary classifiers to the middle layers of the seq2seq model and predicts linguistic labels as a secondary task. Second, a data-augmentation method is proposed which utilizes text alignment to produce extra parallel sequences for model training. Experiments are conducted to evaluate our proposed method with training sets at different sizes. Experimental results show that the multi-task learning with linguistic labels is effective at reducing the errors of seq2seq voice conversion. The data-augmentation method can further improve the performance of seq2seq voice conversion when only 50 or 100 training utterances are available.

SDOct 16, 2018
Sequence-to-Sequence Acoustic Modeling for Voice Conversion

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Zhen-Hua Ling, Li-Juan Liu et al.

In this paper, a neural network named Sequence-to-sequence ConvErsion NeTwork (SCENT) is presented for acoustic modeling in voice conversion. At training stage, a SCENT model is estimated by aligning the feature sequences of source and target speakers implicitly using attention mechanism. At conversion stage, acoustic features and durations of source utterances are converted simultaneously using the unified acoustic model. Mel-scale spectrograms are adopted as acoustic features which contain both excitation and vocal tract descriptions of speech signals. The bottleneck features extracted from source speech using an automatic speech recognition (ASR) model are appended as auxiliary input. A WaveNet vocoder conditioned on Mel-spectrograms is built to reconstruct waveforms from the outputs of the SCENT model. It is worth noting that our proposed method can achieve appropriate duration conversion which is difficult in conventional methods. Experimental results show that our proposed method obtained better objective and subjective performance than the baseline methods using Gaussian mixture models (GMM) and deep neural networks (DNN) as acoustic models. This proposed method also outperformed our previous work which achieved the top rank in Voice Conversion Challenge 2018. Ablation tests further confirmed the effectiveness of several components in our proposed method.

CLJul 18, 2018
Forward Attention in Sequence-to-sequence Acoustic Modelling for Speech Synthesis

Jing-Xuan Zhang, Zhen-Hua Ling, Li-Rong Dai

This paper proposes a forward attention method for the sequenceto- sequence acoustic modeling of speech synthesis. This method is motivated by the nature of the monotonic alignment from phone sequences to acoustic sequences. Only the alignment paths that satisfy the monotonic condition are taken into consideration at each decoder timestep. The modified attention probabilities at each timestep are computed recursively using a forward algorithm. A transition agent for forward attention is further proposed, which helps the attention mechanism to make decisions whether to move forward or stay at each decoder timestep. Experimental results show that the proposed forward attention method achieves faster convergence speed and higher stability than the baseline attention method. Besides, the method of forward attention with transition agent can also help improve the naturalness of synthetic speech and control the speed of synthetic speech effectively.

SDJan 24, 2018
Waveform Modeling and Generation Using Hierarchical Recurrent Neural Networks for Speech Bandwidth Extension

Zhen-Hua Ling, Yang Ai, Yu Gu et al.

This paper presents a waveform modeling and generation method using hierarchical recurrent neural networks (HRNN) for speech bandwidth extension (BWE). Different from conventional BWE methods which predict spectral parameters for reconstructing wideband speech waveforms, this BWE method models and predicts waveform samples directly without using vocoders. Inspired by SampleRNN which is an unconditional neural audio generator, the HRNN model represents the distribution of each wideband or high-frequency waveform sample conditioned on the input narrowband waveform samples using a neural network composed of long short-term memory (LSTM) layers and feed-forward (FF) layers. The LSTM layers form a hierarchical structure and each layer operates at a specific temporal resolution to efficiently capture long-span dependencies between temporal sequences. Furthermore, additional conditions, such as the bottleneck (BN) features derived from narrowband speech using a deep neural network (DNN)-based state classifier, are employed as auxiliary input to further improve the quality of generated wideband speech. The experimental results of comparing several waveform modeling methods show that the HRNN-based method can achieve better speech quality and run-time efficiency than the dilated convolutional neural network (DCNN)-based method and the plain sample-level recurrent neural network (SRNN)-based method. Our proposed method also outperforms the conventional vocoder-based BWE method using LSTM-RNNs in terms of the subjective quality of the reconstructed wideband speech.

SDMar 21, 2017
Multi-Objective Learning and Mask-Based Post-Processing for Deep Neural Network Based Speech Enhancement

Yong Xu, Jun Du, Zhen Huang et al.

We propose a multi-objective framework to learn both secondary targets not directly related to the intended task of speech enhancement (SE) and the primary target of the clean log-power spectra (LPS) features to be used directly for constructing the enhanced speech signals. In deep neural network (DNN) based SE we introduce an auxiliary structure to learn secondary continuous features, such as mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCCs), and categorical information, such as the ideal binary mask (IBM), and integrate it into the original DNN architecture for joint optimization of all the parameters. This joint estimation scheme imposes additional constraints not available in the direct prediction of LPS, and potentially improves the learning of the primary target. Furthermore, the learned secondary information as a byproduct can be used for other purposes, e.g., the IBM-based post-processing in this work. A series of experiments show that joint LPS and MFCC learning improves the SE performance, and IBM-based post-processing further enhances listening quality of the reconstructed speech.