Audio Retrieval with Natural Language Queries: A Benchmark Study
This work addresses the problem of enabling intuitive audio search via text queries for users, but it is incremental as it primarily provides benchmarks rather than novel methods.
The authors tackled cross-modal retrieval between audio and natural language by introducing three new benchmarks (AudioCaps, Clotho, and SoundDescs) to establish baselines, showing that pre-training on diverse audio tasks improves performance.
The objectives of this work are cross-modal text-audio and audio-text retrieval, in which the goal is to retrieve the audio content from a pool of candidates that best matches a given written description and vice versa. Text-audio retrieval enables users to search large databases through an intuitive interface: they simply issue free-form natural language descriptions of the sound they would like to hear. To study the tasks of text-audio and audio-text retrieval, which have received limited attention in the existing literature, we introduce three challenging new benchmarks. We first construct text-audio and audio-text retrieval benchmarks from the AudioCaps and Clotho audio captioning datasets. Additionally, we introduce the SoundDescs benchmark, which consists of paired audio and natural language descriptions for a diverse collection of sounds that are complementary to those found in AudioCaps and Clotho. We employ these three benchmarks to establish baselines for cross-modal text-audio and audio-text retrieval, where we demonstrate the benefits of pre-training on diverse audio tasks. We hope that our benchmarks will inspire further research into audio retrieval with free-form text queries. Code, audio features for all datasets used, and the SoundDescs dataset are publicly available at https://github.com/akoepke/audio-retrieval-benchmark.