ASLGSDMar 31, 2024

Houston we have a Divergence: A Subgroup Performance Analysis of ASR Models

arXiv:2404.07226v1h-index: 72024 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing Workshops (ICASSPW)
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work addresses performance disparities in ASR systems for specialized Earth-to-space communications, though it is incremental as it applies existing methods to analyze a new dataset.

This study analyzed how different characteristics of NASA Apollo mission audio recordings affect Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) performance, finding that factors like signal-to-noise ratio and speaker identity create subgroups with significant performance variations (e.g., word error rate differences up to 40% between subgroups).

The Fearless Steps APOLLO Community Resource provides unparalleled opportunities to explore the potential of multi-speaker team communications from NASA Apollo missions. This study focuses on discovering the characteristics that make Apollo recordings more or less intelligible to Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) methods. We extract, for each audio recording, interpretable metadata on recordings (signal-to-noise ratio, spectral flatness, presence of pauses, sentence duration), transcript (number of words spoken, speaking rate), or known a priori (speaker). We identify subgroups of audio recordings based on combinations of these metadata and compute each subgroup's performance (e.g., Word Error Rate) and the difference in performance (''divergence'') w.r.t the overall population. We then apply the Whisper model in different sizes, trained on English-only or multilingual datasets, in zero-shot or after fine-tuning. We conduct several analyses to (i) automatically identify and describe the most problematic subgroups for a given model, (ii) examine the impact of fine-tuning w.r.t. zero-shot at the subgroup level, (iii) understand the effect of model size on subgroup performance, and (iv) analyze if multilingual models are more sensitive than monolingual to subgroup performance disparities. The insights enhance our understanding of subgroup-specific performance variations, paving the way for advancements in optimizing ASR systems for Earth-to-space communications.

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