Code-switching deals with alternative languages in communication process. Training end-to-end (E2E) automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems for code-switching is especially challenging as code-switching training data are always insufficient to combat the increased multilingual context confusion due to the presence of more than one language. We propose a language-related attention mechanism to reduce multilingual context confusion for the E2E code-switching ASR model based on the Equivalence Constraint (EC) Theory. The linguistic theory requires that any monolingual fragment that occurs in the code-switching sentence must occur in one of the monolingual sentences. The theory establishes a bridge between monolingual data and code-switching...
This paper presents first steps toward a large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system (LVCS...
Code switching (CS) is a natural phenomenon that is often observed in multilingual speakers. These ...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...
Code-switching (CS) in spoken language is where the speech has two or more languages within an utter...
Training multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems is challenging because acoustic and...
Recent breakthroughs in automatic speech recognition (ASR) have resulted in a word error rate (WER) ...
Code-switching is a speech phenomenon occurring when a speaker switches language during a conversati...
We propose a) a Language Agnostic end-to-end Speech Translation model (LAST), and b) a data augmenta...
<p>This paper describes the integration of language identification (LID) into a multilingual automat...
Generally the existing monolingual corpora are not suitable for large vocabulary continuous speech r...
The idea of combining multiple languages’ recordings to train a single automatic speech recognition ...
Adapting Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) models to new domains results in a deterioration of perf...
This research addresses the language model (LM) domain mismatch problem in automatic speech recognit...
The phenomenon where a speaker mixes two or more languages within the same conversation is called co...
The bi-encoder structure has been intensively investigated in code-switching (CS) automatic speech r...
This paper presents first steps toward a large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system (LVCS...
Code switching (CS) is a natural phenomenon that is often observed in multilingual speakers. These ...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...
Code-switching (CS) in spoken language is where the speech has two or more languages within an utter...
Training multilingual automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems is challenging because acoustic and...
Recent breakthroughs in automatic speech recognition (ASR) have resulted in a word error rate (WER) ...
Code-switching is a speech phenomenon occurring when a speaker switches language during a conversati...
We propose a) a Language Agnostic end-to-end Speech Translation model (LAST), and b) a data augmenta...
<p>This paper describes the integration of language identification (LID) into a multilingual automat...
Generally the existing monolingual corpora are not suitable for large vocabulary continuous speech r...
The idea of combining multiple languages’ recordings to train a single automatic speech recognition ...
Adapting Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) models to new domains results in a deterioration of perf...
This research addresses the language model (LM) domain mismatch problem in automatic speech recognit...
The phenomenon where a speaker mixes two or more languages within the same conversation is called co...
The bi-encoder structure has been intensively investigated in code-switching (CS) automatic speech r...
This paper presents first steps toward a large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system (LVCS...
Code switching (CS) is a natural phenomenon that is often observed in multilingual speakers. These ...
Only a handful of the world’s languages are abundant with the resources that enable practical applic...