Lucas Kabela
2022
Joint Audio/Text Training for Transformer Rescorer of Streaming Speech Recognition
Suyoun Kim
|
Ke Li
|
Lucas Kabela
|
Ron Huang
|
Jiedan Zhu
|
Ozlem Kalinli
|
Duc Le
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2022
Recently, there has been an increasing interest in two-pass streaming end-to-end speech recognition (ASR) that incorporates a 2nd-pass rescoring model on top of the conventional 1st-pass streaming ASR model to improve recognition accuracy while keeping latency low. One of the latest 2nd-pass rescoring model, Transformer Rescorer, takes the n-best initial outputs and audio embeddings from the 1st-pass model, and then choose the best output by re-scoring the n-best initial outputs. However, training this Transformer Rescorer requires expensive paired audio-text training data because the model uses audio embeddings as input. In this work, we present our Joint Audio/Text training method for Transformer Rescorer, to leverage unpaired text-only data which is relatively cheaper than paired audio-text data. We evaluate Transformer Rescorer with our Joint Audio/Text training on Librispeech dataset as well as our large-scale in-house dataset and show that our training method can improve word error rate (WER) significantly compared to standard Transformer Rescorer without requiring any extra model parameters or latency.
2021
Contemporary NLP Modeling in Six Comprehensive Programming Assignments
Greg Durrett
|
Jifan Chen
|
Shrey Desai
|
Tanya Goyal
|
Lucas Kabela
|
Yasumasa Onoe
|
Jiacheng Xu
Proceedings of the Fifth Workshop on Teaching NLP
We present a series of programming assignments, adaptable to a range of experience levels from advanced undergraduate to PhD, to teach students design and implementation of modern NLP systems. These assignments build from the ground up and emphasize full-stack understanding of machine learning models: initially, students implement inference and gradient computation by hand, then use PyTorch to build nearly state-of-the-art neural networks using current best practices. Topics are chosen to cover a wide range of modeling and inference techniques that one might encounter, ranging from linear models suitable for industry applications to state-of-the-art deep learning models used in NLP research. The assignments are customizable, with constrained options to guide less experienced students or open-ended options giving advanced students freedom to explore. All of them can be deployed in a fully autogradable fashion, and have collectively been tested on over 300 students across several semesters.
Search
Co-authors
- Suyoun Kim 1
- Ke Li 1
- Ron Huang 1
- Jiedan Zhu 1
- Ozlem Kalinli 1
- show all...