Lukáš Burget

AS
h-index63
25papers
1,734citations
Novelty42%
AI Score46

25 Papers

SDApr 2, 2022
Speaker adaptation for Wav2vec2 based dysarthric ASR

Murali Karthick Baskar, Tim Herzig, Diana Nguyen et al.

Dysarthric speech recognition has posed major challenges due to lack of training data and heavy mismatch in speaker characteristics. Recent ASR systems have benefited from readily available pretrained models such as wav2vec2 to improve the recognition performance. Speaker adaptation using fMLLR and xvectors have provided major gains for dysarthric speech with very little adaptation data. However, integration of wav2vec2 with fMLLR features or xvectors during wav2vec2 finetuning is yet to be explored. In this work, we propose a simple adaptation network for fine-tuning wav2vec2 using fMLLR features. The adaptation network is also flexible to handle other speaker adaptive features such as xvectors. Experimental analysis show steady improvements using our proposed approach across all impairment severity levels and attains 57.72\% WER for high severity in UASpeech dataset. We also performed experiments on German dataset to substantiate the consistency of our proposed approach across diverse domains.

MLMar 28, 2022
Probabilistic Spherical Discriminant Analysis: An Alternative to PLDA for length-normalized embeddings

Niko Brümmer, Albert Swart, Ladislav Mošner et al.

In speaker recognition, where speech segments are mapped to embeddings on the unit hypersphere, two scoring backends are commonly used, namely cosine scoring or PLDA. Both have advantages and disadvantages, depending on the context. Cosine scoring follows naturally from the spherical geometry, but for PLDA the blessing is mixed -- length normalization Gaussianizes the between-speaker distribution, but violates the assumption of a speaker-independent within-speaker distribution. We propose PSDA, an analogue to PLDA that uses Von Mises-Fisher distributions on the hypersphere for both within and between-class distributions. We show how the self-conjugacy of this distribution gives closed-form likelihood-ratio scores, making it a drop-in replacement for PLDA at scoring time. All kinds of trials can be scored, including single-enroll and multi-enroll verification, as well as more complex likelihood-ratios that could be used in clustering and diarization. Learning is done via an EM-algorithm with closed-form updates. We explain the model and present some first experiments.

ASJan 27
SE-DiCoW: Self-Enrolled Diarization-Conditioned Whisper

Alexander Polok, Dominik Klement, Samuele Cornell et al.

Speaker-attributed automatic speech recognition (ASR) in multi-speaker environments remains a major challenge. While some approaches achieve strong performance when fine-tuned on specific domains, few systems generalize well across out-of-domain datasets. Our prior work, Diarization-Conditioned Whisper (DiCoW), leverages speaker diarization outputs as conditioning information and, with minimal fine-tuning, demonstrated strong multilingual and multi-domain performance. In this paper, we address a key limitation of DiCoW: ambiguity in Silence-Target-Non-target-Overlap (STNO) masks, where two or more fully overlapping speakers may have nearly identical conditioning despite differing transcriptions. We introduce SE-DiCoW (Self-Enrolled Diarization-Conditioned Whisper), which uses diarization output to locate an enrollment segment anywhere in the conversation where the target speaker is most active. This enrollment segment is used as fixed conditioning via cross-attention at each encoder layer. We further refine DiCoW with improved data segmentation, model initialization, and augmentation. Together, these advances yield substantial gains: SE-DiCoW reduces macro-averaged tcpWER by 52.4% relative to the original DiCoW on the EMMA MT-ASR benchmark.

ASOct 4, 2025
Adapting Diarization-Conditioned Whisper for End-to-End Multi-Talker Speech Recognition

Martin Kocour, Martin Karafiat, Alexander Polok et al.

We propose a speaker-attributed (SA) Whisper-based model for multi-talker speech recognition that combines target-speaker modeling with serialized output training (SOT). Our approach leverages a Diarization-Conditioned Whisper (DiCoW) encoder to extract target-speaker embeddings, which are concatenated into a single representation and passed to a shared decoder. This enables the model to transcribe overlapping speech as a serialized output stream with speaker tags and timestamps. In contrast to target-speaker ASR systems such as DiCoW, which decode each speaker separately, our approach performs joint decoding, allowing the decoder to condition on the context of all speakers simultaneously. Experiments show that the model outperforms existing SOT-based approaches and surpasses DiCoW on multi-talker mixtures (e.g., LibriMix).

ASSep 26, 2025
Unsupervised Speech Enhancement using Data-defined Priors

Dominik Klement, Matthew Maciejewski, Sanjeev Khudanpur et al.

The majority of deep learning-based speech enhancement methods require paired clean-noisy speech data. Collecting such data at scale in real-world conditions is infeasible, which has led the community to rely on synthetically generated noisy speech. However, this introduces a gap between the training and testing phases. In this work, we propose a novel dual-branch encoder-decoder architecture for unsupervised speech enhancement that separates the input into clean speech and residual noise. Adversarial training is employed to impose priors on each branch, defined by unpaired datasets of clean speech and, optionally, noise. Experimental results show that our method achieves performance comparable to leading unsupervised speech enhancement approaches. Furthermore, we demonstrate the critical impact of clean speech data selection on enhancement performance. In particular, our findings reveal that performance may appear overly optimistic when in-domain clean speech data are used for prior definition -- a practice adopted in previous unsupervised speech enhancement studies.

ASMar 12, 2024
Beyond the Labels: Unveiling Text-Dependency in Paralinguistic Speech Recognition Datasets

Jan Pešán, Santosh Kesiraju, Lukáš Burget et al.

Paralinguistic traits like cognitive load and emotion are increasingly recognized as pivotal areas in speech recognition research, often examined through specialized datasets like CLSE and IEMOCAP. However, the integrity of these datasets is seldom scrutinized for text-dependency. This paper critically evaluates the prevalent assumption that machine learning models trained on such datasets genuinely learn to identify paralinguistic traits, rather than merely capturing lexical features. By examining the lexical overlap in these datasets and testing the performance of machine learning models, we expose significant text-dependency in trait-labeling. Our results suggest that some machine learning models, especially large pre-trained models like HuBERT, might inadvertently focus on lexical characteristics rather than the intended paralinguistic features. The study serves as a call to action for the research community to reevaluate the reliability of existing datasets and methodologies, ensuring that machine learning models genuinely learn what they are designed to recognize.

CLMay 21, 2023
Hystoc: Obtaining word confidences for fusion of end-to-end ASR systems

Karel Beneš, Martin Kocour, Lukáš Burget

End-to-end (e2e) systems have recently gained wide popularity in automatic speech recognition. However, these systems do generally not provide well-calibrated word-level confidences. In this paper, we propose Hystoc, a simple method for obtaining word-level confidences from hypothesis-level scores. Hystoc is an iterative alignment procedure which turns hypotheses from an n-best output of the ASR system into a confusion network. Eventually, word-level confidences are obtained as posterior probabilities in the individual bins of the confusion network. We show that Hystoc provides confidences that correlate well with the accuracy of the ASR hypothesis. Furthermore, we show that utilizing Hystoc in fusion of multiple e2e ASR systems increases the gains from the fusion by up to 1\,\% WER absolute on Spanish RTVE2020 dataset. Finally, we experiment with using Hystoc for direct fusion of n-best outputs from multiple systems, but we only achieve minor gains when fusing very similar systems.

ASNov 11, 2021
MultiSV: Dataset for Far-Field Multi-Channel Speaker Verification

Ladislav Mošner, Oldřich Plchot, Lukáš Burget et al.

Motivated by unconsolidated data situation and the lack of a standard benchmark in the field, we complement our previous efforts and present a comprehensive corpus designed for training and evaluating text-independent multi-channel speaker verification systems. It can be readily used also for experiments with dereverberation, denoising, and speech enhancement. We tackled the ever-present problem of the lack of multi-channel training data by utilizing data simulation on top of clean parts of the Voxceleb dataset. The development and evaluation trials are based on a retransmitted Voices Obscured in Complex Environmental Settings (VOiCES) corpus, which we modified to provide multi-channel trials. We publish full recipes that create the dataset from public sources as the MultiSV corpus, and we provide results with two of our multi-channel speaker verification systems with neural network-based beamforming based either on predicting ideal binary masks or the more recent Conv-TasNet.

ASOct 31, 2021
Revisiting joint decoding based multi-talker speech recognition with DNN acoustic model

Martin Kocour, Kateřina Žmolíková, Lucas Ondel et al.

In typical multi-talker speech recognition systems, a neural network-based acoustic model predicts senone state posteriors for each speaker. These are later used by a single-talker decoder which is applied on each speaker-specific output stream separately. In this work, we argue that such a scheme is sub-optimal and propose a principled solution that decodes all speakers jointly. We modify the acoustic model to predict joint state posteriors for all speakers, enabling the network to express uncertainty about the attribution of parts of the speech signal to the speakers. We employ a joint decoder that can make use of this uncertainty together with higher-level language information. For this, we revisit decoding algorithms used in factorial generative models in early multi-talker speech recognition systems. In contrast with these early works, we replace the GMM acoustic model with DNN, which provides greater modeling power and simplifies part of the inference. We demonstrate the advantage of joint decoding in proof of concept experiments on a mixed-TIDIGITS dataset.

DCOct 22, 2021
GPU-Accelerated Forward-Backward algorithm with Application to Lattice-Free MMI

Lucas Ondel, Léa-Marie Lam-Yee-Mui, Martin Kocour et al.

We propose to express the forward-backward algorithm in terms of operations between sparse matrices in a specific semiring. This new perspective naturally leads to a GPU-friendly algorithm which is easy to implement in Julia or any programming languages with native support of semiring algebra. We use this new implementation to train a TDNN with the LF-MMI objective function and we compare the training time of our system with PyChain - a recently introduced C++/CUDA implementation of the LF-MMI loss. Our implementation is about two times faster while not having to use any approximation such as the "leaky-HMM".

ASApr 13, 2021
EAT: Enhanced ASR-TTS for Self-supervised Speech Recognition

Murali Karthick Baskar, Lukáš Burget, Shinji Watanabe et al.

Self-supervised ASR-TTS models suffer in out-of-domain data conditions. Here we propose an enhanced ASR-TTS (EAT) model that incorporates two main features: 1) The ASR$\rightarrow$TTS direction is equipped with a language model reward to penalize the ASR hypotheses before forwarding it to TTS. 2) In the TTS$\rightarrow$ASR direction, a hyper-parameter is introduced to scale the attention context from synthesized speech before sending it to ASR to handle out-of-domain data. Training strategies and the effectiveness of the EAT model are explored under out-of-domain data conditions. The results show that EAT reduces the performance gap between supervised and self-supervised training significantly by absolute 2.6\% and 2.7\% on Librispeech and BABEL respectively.

ASDec 29, 2020
Bayesian HMM clustering of x-vector sequences (VBx) in speaker diarization: theory, implementation and analysis on standard tasks

Federico Landini, Ján Profant, Mireia Diez et al.

The recently proposed VBx diarization method uses a Bayesian hidden Markov model to find speaker clusters in a sequence of x-vectors. In this work we perform an extensive comparison of performance of the VBx diarization with other approaches in the literature and we show that VBx achieves superior performance on three of the most popular datasets for evaluating diarization: CALLHOME, AMI and DIHARDII datasets. Further, we present for the first time the derivation and update formulae for the VBx model, focusing on the efficiency and simplicity of this model as compared to the previous and more complex BHMM model working on frame-by-frame standard Cepstral features. Together with this publication, we release the recipe for training the x-vector extractors used in our experiments on both wide and narrowband data, and the VBx recipes that attain state-of-the-art performance on all three datasets. Besides, we point out the lack of a standardized evaluation protocol for AMI dataset and we propose a new protocol for both Beamformed and Mix-Headset audios based on the official AMI partitions and transcriptions.

CLNov 11, 2020
Text Augmentation for Language Models in High Error Recognition Scenario

Karel Beneš, Lukáš Burget

We examine the effect of data augmentation for training of language models for speech recognition. We compare augmentation based on global error statistics with one based on per-word unigram statistics of ASR errors and observe that it is better to only pay attention the global substitution, deletion and insertion rates. This simple scheme also performs consistently better than label smoothing and its sampled variants. Additionally, we investigate into the behavior of perplexity estimated on augmented data, but conclude that it gives no better prediction of the final error rate. Our best augmentation scheme increases the absolute WER improvement from second-pass rescoring from 1.1 % to 1.9 % absolute on the CHiMe-6 challenge.

ASOct 22, 2020
Analysis of the BUT Diarization System for VoxConverse Challenge

Federico Landini, Ondřej Glembek, Pavel Matějka et al.

This paper describes the system developed by the BUT team for the fourth track of the VoxCeleb Speaker Recognition Challenge, focusing on diarization on the VoxConverse dataset. The system consists of signal pre-processing, voice activity detection, speaker embedding extraction, an initial agglomerative hierarchical clustering followed by diarization using a Bayesian hidden Markov model, a reclustering step based on per-speaker global embeddings and overlapped speech detection and handling. We provide comparisons for each of the steps and share the implementation of the most relevant modules of our system. Our system scored second in the challenge in terms of the primary metric (diarization error rate) and first according to the secondary metric (Jaccard error rate).

CLJul 2, 2020
A Bayesian Multilingual Document Model for Zero-shot Topic Identification and Discovery

Santosh Kesiraju, Sangeet Sagar, Ondřej Glembek et al.

In this paper, we present a Bayesian multilingual document model for learning language-independent document embeddings. The model is an extension of BaySMM [Kesiraju et al 2020] to the multilingual scenario. It learns to represent the document embeddings in the form of Gaussian distributions, thereby encoding the uncertainty in its covariance. We propagate the learned uncertainties through linear classifiers that benefit zero-shot cross-lingual topic identification. Our experiments on 17 languages show that the proposed multilingual Bayesian document model performs competitively, when compared to other systems based on large-scale neural networks (LASER, XLM-R, mUSE) on 8 high-resource languages, and outperforms these systems on 9 mid-resource languages. We revisit cross-lingual topic identification in zero-shot settings by taking a deeper dive into current datasets, baseline systems and the languages covered. We identify shortcomings in the existing evaluation protocol (MLDoc dataset), and propose a robust alternative scheme, while also extending the cross-lingual experimental setup to 17 languages. Finally, we consolidate the observations from all our experiments, and discuss points that can potentially benefit the future research works in applications relying on cross-lingual transfers.

ASApr 6, 2020
Probabilistic embeddings for speaker diarization

Anna Silnova, Niko Brümmer, Johan Rohdin et al.

Speaker embeddings (x-vectors) extracted from very short segments of speech have recently been shown to give competitive performance in speaker diarization. We generalize this recipe by extracting from each speech segment, in parallel with the x-vector, also a diagonal precision matrix, thus providing a path for the propagation of information about the quality of the speech segment into a PLDA scoring backend. These precisions quantify the uncertainty about what the values of the embeddings might have been if they had been extracted from high quality speech segments. The proposed probabilistic embeddings (x-vectors with precisions) are interfaced with the PLDA model by treating the x-vectors as hidden variables and marginalizing them out. We apply the proposed probabilistic embeddings as input to an agglomerative hierarchical clustering (AHC) algorithm to do diarization in the DIHARD'19 evaluation set. We compute the full PLDA likelihood 'by the book' for each clustering hypothesis that is considered by AHC. We do joint discriminative training of the PLDA parameters and of the probabilistic x-vector extractor. We demonstrate accuracy gains relative to a baseline AHC algorithm, applied to traditional xvectors (without uncertainty), and which uses averaging of binary log-likelihood-ratios, rather than by-the-book scoring.

ASDec 8, 2019
A Multi Purpose and Large Scale Speech Corpus in Persian and English for Speaker and Speech Recognition: the DeepMine Database

Hossein Zeinali, Lukáš Burget, Jan "Honza'' Černocký

DeepMine is a speech database in Persian and English designed to build and evaluate text-dependent, text-prompted, and text-independent speaker verification, as well as Persian speech recognition systems. It contains more than 1850 speakers and 540 thousand recordings overall, more than 480 hours of speech are transcribed. It is the first public large-scale speaker verification database in Persian, the largest public text-dependent and text-prompted speaker verification database in English, and the largest public evaluation dataset for text-independent speaker verification. It has a good coverage of age, gender, and accents. We provide several evaluation protocols for each part of the database to allow for research on different aspects of speaker verification. We also provide the results of several experiments that can be considered as baselines: HMM-based i-vectors for text-dependent speaker verification, and HMM-based as well as state-of-the-art deep neural network based ASR. We demonstrate that the database can serve for training robust ASR models.

CLAug 20, 2019
Learning document embeddings along with their uncertainties

Santosh Kesiraju, Oldřich Plchot, Lukáš Burget et al.

Majority of the text modelling techniques yield only point-estimates of document embeddings and lack in capturing the uncertainty of the estimates. These uncertainties give a notion of how well the embeddings represent a document. We present Bayesian subspace multinomial model (Bayesian SMM), a generative log-linear model that learns to represent documents in the form of Gaussian distributions, thereby encoding the uncertainty in its co-variance. Additionally, in the proposed Bayesian SMM, we address a commonly encountered problem of intractability that appears during variational inference in mixed-logit models. We also present a generative Gaussian linear classifier for topic identification that exploits the uncertainty in document embeddings. Our intrinsic evaluation using perplexity measure shows that the proposed Bayesian SMM fits the data better as compared to the state-of-the-art neural variational document model on Fisher speech and 20Newsgroups text corpora. Our topic identification experiments show that the proposed systems are robust to over-fitting on unseen test data. The topic ID results show that the proposed model is outperforms state-of-the-art unsupervised topic models and achieve comparable results to the state-of-the-art fully supervised discriminative models.

ASJul 13, 2019
Acoustic Scene Classification Using Fusion of Attentive Convolutional Neural Networks for DCASE2019 Challenge

Hossein Zeinali, Lukáš Burget, Jan "Honza'' Černocký

In this report, the Brno University of Technology (BUT) team submissions for Task 1 (Acoustic Scene Classification, ASC) of the DCASE-2019 challenge are described. Also, the analysis of different methods is provided. The proposed approach is a fusion of three different Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) topologies. The first one is a VGG like two-dimensional CNNs. The second one is again a two-dimensional CNN network which uses Max-Feature-Map activation and called Light-CNN (LCNN). The third network is a one-dimensional CNN which mainly used for speaker verification and called x-vector topology. All proposed networks use self-attention mechanism for statistic pooling. As a feature, we use a 256-dimensional log Mel-spectrogram. Our submissions are a fusion of several networks trained on 4-folds generated evaluation setup using different fusion strategies.

ASJul 13, 2019
BUT VOiCES 2019 System Description

Hossein Zeinali, Pavel Matějka, Ladislav Mošner et al.

This is a description of our effort in VOiCES 2019 Speaker Recognition challenge. All systems in the fixed condition are based on the x-vector paradigm with different features and DNN topologies. The single best system reaches 1.2% EER and a fusion of 3 systems yields 1.0% EER, which is 15% relative improvement. The open condition allowed us to use external data which we did for the PLDA adaptation and achieved less than ~10% relative improvement. In the submission to open condition, we used 3 x-vector systems and also one i-vector based system.

CVJul 13, 2019
Detecting Spoofing Attacks Using VGG and SincNet: BUT-Omilia Submission to ASVspoof 2019 Challenge

Hossein Zeinali, Themos Stafylakis, Georgia Athanasopoulou et al.

In this paper, we present the system description of the joint efforts of Brno University of Technology (BUT) and Omilia -- Conversational Intelligence for the ASVSpoof2019 Spoofing and Countermeasures Challenge. The primary submission for Physical access (PA) is a fusion of two VGG networks, trained on single and two-channels features. For Logical access (LA), our primary system is a fusion of VGG and the recently introduced SincNet architecture. The results on PA show that the proposed networks yield very competitive performance in all conditions and achieved 86\:\% relative improvement compared to the official baseline. On the other hand, the results on LA showed that although the proposed architecture and training strategy performs very well on certain spoofing attacks, it fails to generalize to certain attacks that are unseen during training.

ASApr 30, 2019
Semi-supervised Sequence-to-sequence ASR using Unpaired Speech and Text

Murali Karthick Baskar, Shinji Watanabe, Ramon Astudillo et al.

Sequence-to-sequence automatic speech recognition (ASR) models require large quantities of data to attain high performance. For this reason, there has been a recent surge in interest for unsupervised and semi-supervised training in such models. This work builds upon recent results showing notable improvements in semi-supervised training using cycle-consistency and related techniques. Such techniques derive training procedures and losses able to leverage unpaired speech and/or text data by combining ASR with Text-to-Speech (TTS) models. In particular, this work proposes a new semi-supervised loss combining an end-to-end differentiable ASR$\rightarrow$TTS loss with TTS$\rightarrow$ASR loss. The method is able to leverage both unpaired speech and text data to outperform recently proposed related techniques in terms of \%WER. We provide extensive results analyzing the impact of data quantity and speech and text modalities and show consistent gains across WSJ and Librispeech corpora. Our code is provided in ESPnet to reproduce the experiments.

LGApr 8, 2019
Bayesian Subspace Hidden Markov Model for Acoustic Unit Discovery

Lucas Ondel, Hari Krishna Vydana, Lukáš Burget et al.

This work tackles the problem of learning a set of language specific acoustic units from unlabeled speech recordings given a set of labeled recordings from other languages. Our approach may be described by the following two steps procedure: first the model learns the notion of acoustic units from the labelled data and then the model uses its knowledge to find new acoustic units on the target language. We implement this process with the Bayesian Subspace Hidden Markov Model (SHMM), a model akin to the Subspace Gaussian Mixture Model (SGMM) where each low dimensional embedding represents an acoustic unit rather than just a HMM's state. The subspace is trained on 3 languages from the GlobalPhone corpus (German, Polish and Spanish) and the AUs are discovered on the TIMIT corpus. Results, measured in equivalent Phone Error Rate, show that this approach significantly outperforms previous HMM based acoustic units discovery systems and compares favorably with the Variational Auto Encoder-HMM.

CLFeb 25, 2019
BUT-FIT at SemEval-2019 Task 7: Determining the Rumour Stance with Pre-Trained Deep Bidirectional Transformers

Martin Fajcik, Lukáš Burget, Pavel Smrz

This paper describes our system submitted to SemEval 2019 Task 7: RumourEval 2019: Determining Rumour Veracity and Support for Rumours, Subtask A (Gorrell et al., 2019). The challenge focused on classifying whether posts from Twitter and Reddit support, deny, query, or comment a hidden rumour, truthfulness of which is the topic of an underlying discussion thread. We formulate the problem as a stance classification, determining the rumour stance of a post with respect to the previous thread post and the source thread post. The recent BERT architecture was employed to build an end-to-end system which has reached the F1 score of 61.67% on the provided test data. It finished at the 2nd place in the competition, without any hand-crafted features, only 0.2% behind the winner.

ASNov 7, 2018
Promising Accurate Prefix Boosting for sequence-to-sequence ASR

Murali Karthick Baskar, Lukáš Burget, Shinji Watanabe et al.

In this paper, we present promising accurate prefix boosting (PAPB), a discriminative training technique for attention based sequence-to-sequence (seq2seq) ASR. PAPB is devised to unify the training and testing scheme in an effective manner. The training procedure involves maximizing the score of each partial correct sequence obtained during beam search compared to other hypotheses. The training objective also includes minimization of token (character) error rate. PAPB shows its efficacy by achieving 10.8\% and 3.8\% WER with and without RNNLM respectively on Wall Street Journal dataset.