Insertion-Based Modeling for End-to-End Automatic Speech Recognition
This work addresses the problem of inefficient decoding in ASR for researchers and practitioners, offering a non-autoregressive alternative that is incremental over existing methods.
The paper tackles the limitation of left-to-right decoding in end-to-end automatic speech recognition by proposing insertion-based non-autoregressive models, which avoid heuristics for output length estimation and allow arbitrary generation orders, achieving competitive performance to strong autoregressive Transformers on three public benchmarks.
End-to-end (E2E) models have gained attention in the research field of automatic speech recognition (ASR). Many E2E models proposed so far assume left-to-right autoregressive generation of an output token sequence except for connectionist temporal classification (CTC) and its variants. However, left-to-right decoding cannot consider the future output context, and it is not always optimal for ASR. One of the non-left-to-right models is known as non-autoregressive Transformer (NAT) and has been intensively investigated in the area of neural machine translation (NMT) research. One NAT model, mask-predict, has been applied to ASR but the model needs some heuristics or additional component to estimate the length of the output token sequence. This paper proposes to apply another type of NAT called insertion-based models, that were originally proposed for NMT, to ASR tasks. Insertion-based models solve the above mask-predict issues and can generate an arbitrary generation order of an output sequence. In addition, we introduce a new formulation of joint training of the insertion-based models and CTC. This formulation reinforces CTC by making it dependent on insertion-based token generation in a non-autoregressive manner. We conducted experiments on three public benchmarks and achieved competitive performance to strong autoregressive Transformer with a similar decoding condition.