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AntoineCaubrière
Fixing paper assignments
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Les approches auto-supervisées ont conduit à des avancées majeures dans le domaine de l’apprentissage profond. Par l’exploitation d’une grande quantité de données non annotées, ces approches ont notamment permis des améliorations dans des contextes peu dotés. Toutefois, les langues africaines restent majoritairement sous-représentées dans les jeux de données de préentraînement publiquement distribués. Dans ces travaux, nous préentraînons des modèles de parole auto-supervisés multilingues à partir de langues subsahariennes exclusivement. Nous étudions la pertinence des représentations apprises sur la tâche de reconnaissance de parole, en utilisant le jeu d’évaluation FLEURS-102. Notre modèle HuBERT Base obtient des résultats similaires face à l’approche multilingue w2v-bert de FLEURS, tout en étant plus efficient, avec 6 fois moins de paramètres et 7 fois moins de données. Nous présentont aussi un second modèle exploitant une sous-sélection équilibrée des données initiales, obtenant des performances compétitives avec près de 80 fois moins de données de préentraînement.
With the emergence of neural end-to-end approaches for spoken language understanding (SLU), a growing number of studies have been presented during these last three years on this topic. The major part of these works addresses the spoken language understanding domain through a simple task like speech intent detection. In this context, new benchmark datasets have also been produced and shared with the community related to this task. In this paper, we focus on the French MEDIA SLU dataset, distributed since 2005 and used as a benchmark dataset for a large number of research works. This dataset has been shown as being the most challenging one among those accessible to the research community. Distributed by ELRA, this corpus is free for academic research since 2019. Unfortunately, the MEDIA dataset is not really used beyond the French research community. To facilitate its use, a complete recipe, including data preparation, training and evaluation scripts, has been built and integrated to SpeechBrain, an already popular open-source and all-in-one conversational AI toolkit based on PyTorch. This recipe is presented in this paper. In addition, based on the feedback of some researchers who have worked on this dataset for several years, some corrections have been brought to the initial manual annotation: the new version of the data will also be integrated into the ELRA catalogue, as the original one. More, a significant amount of data collected during the construction of the MEDIA corpus in the 2000s was never used until now: we present the first results reached on this subset — also included in the MEDIA SpeechBrain recipe — , that will be used for now as the MEDIA test2. Last, we discuss evaluation issues.
Pretrained models through self-supervised learning have been recently introduced for both acoustic and language modeling. Applied to spoken language understanding tasks, these models have shown their great potential by improving the state-of-the-art performances on challenging benchmark datasets. In this paper, we present an error analysis reached by the use of such models on the French MEDIA benchmark dataset, known as being one of the most challenging benchmarks for the slot filling task among all the benchmarks accessible to the entire research community. One year ago, the state-of-art system reached a Concept Error Rate (CER) of 13.6% through the use of a end-to-end neural architecture. Some months later, a cascade approach based on the sequential use of a fine-tuned wav2vec2.0 model and a fine-tuned BERT model reaches a CER of 11.2%. This significant improvement raises questions about the type of errors that remain difficult to treat, but also about those that have been corrected using these models pre-trained through self-supervision learning on a large amount of data. This study brings some answers in order to better understand the limits of such models and open new perspectives to continue improving the performance.
This paper describes the ON-TRAC Consortium translation systems developed for two challenge tracks featured in the Evaluation Campaign of IWSLT 2020, offline speech translation and simultaneous speech translation. ON-TRAC Consortium is composed of researchers from three French academic laboratories: LIA (Avignon Université), LIG (Université Grenoble Alpes), and LIUM (Le Mans Université). Attention-based encoder-decoder models, trained end-to-end, were used for our submissions to the offline speech translation track. Our contributions focused on data augmentation and ensembling of multiple models. In the simultaneous speech translation track, we build on Transformer-based wait-k models for the text-to-text subtask. For speech-to-text simultaneous translation, we attach a wait-k MT system to a hybrid ASR system. We propose an algorithm to control the latency of the ASR+MT cascade and achieve a good latency-quality trade-off on both subtasks.
La reconnaissance des entités nommées (REN) à partir de la parole est traditionnellement effectuée par l’intermédiaire d’une chaîne de composants, exploitant un système de reconnaissance de la parole (RAP), puis un système de REN appliqué sur les transcriptions automatiques. Les dernières données disponibles pour la REN structurées à partir de la parole en français proviennent de la campagne d’évaluation ETAPE en 2012. Depuis la publication des résultats, des améliorations majeures ont été réalisées pour les systèmes de REN et de RAP. Notamment avec le développement des systèmes neuronaux. De plus, certains travaux montrent l’intérêt des approches de bout en bout pour la tâche de REN dans la parole. Nous proposons une étude des améliorations en RAP et REN dans le cadre d’une chaîne de composants, ainsi qu’une nouvelle approche en trois étapes. Nous explorons aussi les capacités d’une approche bout en bout pour la REN structurées. Enfin, nous comparons ces deux types d’approches à l’état de l’art de la campagne ETAPE. Nos résultats montrent l’intérêt de l’approche bout en bout, qui reste toutefois en deçà d’une chaîne de composants entièrement mise à jour.
Named entity recognition (NER) from speech is usually made through a pipeline process that consists in (i) processing audio using an automatic speech recognition system (ASR) and (ii) applying a NER to the ASR outputs. The latest data available for named entity extraction from speech in French were produced during the ETAPE evaluation campaign in 2012. Since the publication of ETAPE’s campaign results, major improvements were done on NER and ASR systems, especially with the development of neural approaches for both of these components. In addition, recent studies have shown the capability of End-to-End (E2E) approach for NER / SLU tasks. In this paper, we propose a study of the improvements made in speech recognition and named entity recognition for pipeline approaches. For this type of systems, we propose an original 3-pass approach. We also explore the capability of an E2E system to do structured NER. Finally, we compare the performances of ETAPE’s systems (state-of-the-art systems in 2012) with the performances obtained using current technologies. The results show the interest of the E2E approach, which however remains below an updated pipeline approach.
This paper describes the ON-TRAC Consortium translation systems developed for the end-to-end model task of IWSLT Evaluation 2019 for the English→ Portuguese language pair. ON-TRAC Consortium is composed of researchers from three French academic laboratories: LIA (Avignon Université), LIG (Université Grenoble Alpes), and LIUM (Le Mans Université). A single end-to-end model built as a neural encoder-decoder architecture with attention mechanism was used for two primary submissions corresponding to the two EN-PT evaluations sets: (1) TED (MuST-C) and (2) How2. In this paper, we notably investigate impact of pooling heterogeneous corpora for training, impact of target tokenization (characters or BPEs), impact of speech input segmentation and we also compare our best end-to-end model (BLEU of 26.91 on MuST-C and 43.82 on How2 validation sets) to a pipeline (ASR+MT) approach.
Dans cet article, nous présentons une approche de bout en bout d’extraction de concepts sémantiques de la parole. En particulier, nous mettons en avant l’apport d’une chaîne d’apprentissage successif pilotée par une stratégie de curriculum d’apprentissage. Dans la chaîne d’apprentissage mise en place, nous exploitons des données françaises annotées en entités nommées que nous supposons être des concepts plus génériques que les concepts sémantiques liés à une application informatique spécifique. Dans cette étude, il s’agit d’extraire des concepts sémantiques dans le cadre de la tâche MEDIA. Pour renforcer le système proposé, nous exploitons aussi des stratégies d’augmentation de données, un modèle de langage 5-gramme, ainsi qu’un mode étoile aidant le système à se concentrer sur les concepts et leurs valeurs lors de l’apprentissage. Les résultats montrent un intérêt à l’utilisation des données d’entités nommées, permettant un gain relatif allant jusqu’à 6,5 %.