End-to-end Neural Diarization: From Transformer to Conformer
This work addresses speaker diarization for speech processing, offering incremental improvements through architecture and data mixing.
The paper tackled speaker diarization by proposing a Conformer-based end-to-end neural system, achieving a 24% error reduction over the baseline and a 10% improvement over the best Transformer-based system on two-speaker CALLHOME data.
We propose a new end-to-end neural diarization (EEND) system that is based on Conformer, a recently proposed neural architecture that combines convolutional mappings and Transformer to model both local and global dependencies in speech. We first show that data augmentation and convolutional subsampling layers enhance the original self-attentive EEND in the Transformer-based EEND, and then Conformer gives an additional gain over the Transformer-based EEND. However, we notice that the Conformer-based EEND does not generalize as well from simulated to real conversation data as the Transformer-based model. This leads us to quantify the mismatch between simulated data and real speaker behavior in terms of temporal statistics reflecting turn-taking between speakers, and investigate its correlation with diarization error. By mixing simulated and real data in EEND training, we mitigate the mismatch further, with Conformer-based EEND achieving 24% error reduction over the baseline SA-EEND system, and 10% improvement over the best augmented Transformer-based system, on two-speaker CALLHOME data.