CLAIDec 24, 2025

SpidR-Adapt: A Universal Speech Representation Model for Few-Shot Adaptation

arXiv:2512.21204v12 citationsh-index: 19Has Code
Originality Highly original
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This addresses the problem of data-hungry speech models for researchers and practitioners in low-resource language processing, offering a practical, architecture-agnostic solution with significant efficiency gains.

The paper tackles the data inefficiency of self-supervised speech models by introducing SpidR-Adapt, a model for few-shot adaptation to new languages using minimal unlabeled data, achieving over 100x more data-efficient training and improving phonemic discriminability and spoken language modeling after less than 1 hour of target-language audio.

Human infants, with only a few hundred hours of speech exposure, acquire basic units of new languages, highlighting a striking efficiency gap compared to the data-hungry self-supervised speech models. To address this gap, this paper introduces SpidR-Adapt for rapid adaptation to new languages using minimal unlabeled data. We cast such low-resource speech representation learning as a meta-learning problem and construct a multi-task adaptive pre-training (MAdaPT) protocol which formulates the adaptation process as a bi-level optimization framework. To enable scalable meta-training under this framework, we propose a novel heuristic solution, first-order bi-level optimization (FOBLO), avoiding heavy computation costs. Finally, we stabilize meta-training by using a robust initialization through interleaved supervision which alternates self-supervised and supervised objectives. Empirically, SpidR-Adapt achieves rapid gains in phonemic discriminability (ABX) and spoken language modeling (sWUGGY, sBLIMP, tSC), improving over in-domain language models after training on less than 1h of target-language audio, over $100\times$ more data-efficient than standard training. These findings highlight a practical, architecture-agnostic path toward biologically inspired, data-efficient representations. We open-source the training code and model checkpoints at https://github.com/facebookresearch/spidr-adapt.

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