scholarly journals Prosodic Feature-Based Discriminatively Trained Low Resource Speech Recognition System

2022 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 614
Author(s):  
Taniya Hasija ◽  
Virender Kadyan ◽  
Kalpna Guleria ◽  
Abdullah Alharbi ◽  
Hashem Alyami ◽  
...  

Speech recognition has been an active field of research in the last few decades since it facilitates better human–computer interaction. Native language automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems are still underdeveloped. Punjabi ASR systems are in their infancy stage because most research has been conducted only on adult speech systems; however, less work has been performed on Punjabi children’s ASR systems. This research aimed to build a prosodic feature-based automatic children speech recognition system using discriminative modeling techniques. The corpus of Punjabi children’s speech has various runtime challenges, such as acoustic variations with varying speakers’ ages. Efforts were made to implement out-domain data augmentation to overcome such issues using Tacotron-based text to a speech synthesizer. The prosodic features were extracted from Punjabi children’s speech corpus, then particular prosodic features were coupled with Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficient (MFCC) features before being submitted to an ASR framework. The system modeling process investigated various approaches, which included Maximum Mutual Information (MMI), Boosted Maximum Mutual Information (bMMI), and feature-based Maximum Mutual Information (fMMI). The out-domain data augmentation was performed to enhance the corpus. After that, prosodic features were also extracted from the extended corpus, and experiments were conducted on both individual and integrated prosodic-based acoustic features. It was observed that the fMMI technique exhibited 20% to 25% relative improvement in word error rate compared with MMI and bMMI techniques. Further, it was enhanced using an augmented dataset and hybrid front-end features (MFCC + POV + Fo + Voice quality) with a relative improvement of 13% compared with the earlier baseline system.

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 1275-1282
Author(s):  
Shipra J. Arora ◽  
Rishipal Singh

Abstract The paper represents a Punjabi corpus in the agriculture domain. There are various dialects in the Punjabi language and the main concentration is on major dialects, i.e. Majhi, Malwai and Doabi for the present study. A speech corpus of 125 isolated words is taken into consideration. These words are uttered by 100 speakers, i.e. 60 Malwi dialect speakers (30 male and 30 female), 20 Majhi dialect speakers (10 male and 10 female) and 20 Doabi dialect speakers (10 male and 10 female). Tonemes, adhak (geminated) and nasal words are selected from the corpus. Recordings have been processed through two mediums. The paper also elaborates some distinctive features of the corpus. This corpus is of quite significance for the speech recognition system. Prosodic characteristics such as intonation, rhythm and stress create a crucial impact on the speech recognition system. These characteristics vary from language to language as well as various dialects of a language. This paper portrays a comparative analysis of isolated words prosodic features of Malwi, Majhi and Doabi dialects of Punjabi language. Analysis is done using the PRAAT tool. Pitch, intensity, formant I and formant II values are extracted for toneme, adhak, nasal (bindi) and nasal (tippi) words. For all kinds of words, there is a significant variation in pitch (fundamental frequency), intensity, formant I and formant II values of male and female speakers of Malwi, Majhi and Doabi dialects. A detailed analysis has been discussed throughout this paper.


Information ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eshete Derb Emiru ◽  
Shengwu Xiong ◽  
Yaxing Li ◽  
Awet Fesseha ◽  
Moussa Diallo

Out-of-vocabulary (OOV) words are the most challenging problem in automatic speech recognition (ASR), especially for morphologically rich languages. Most end-to-end speech recognition systems are performed at word and character levels of a language. Amharic is a poorly resourced but morphologically rich language. This paper proposes hybrid connectionist temporal classification with attention end-to-end architecture and a syllabification algorithm for Amharic automatic speech recognition system (AASR) using its phoneme-based subword units. This algorithm helps to insert the epithetic vowel እ[ɨ], which is not included in our Grapheme-to-Phoneme (G2P) conversion algorithm developed using consonant–vowel (CV) representations of Amharic graphemes. The proposed end-to-end model was trained in various Amharic subwords, namely characters, phonemes, character-based subwords, and phoneme-based subwords generated by the byte-pair-encoding (BPE) segmentation algorithm. Experimental results showed that context-dependent phoneme-based subwords tend to result in more accurate speech recognition systems than the character-based, phoneme-based, and character-based subword counterparts. Further improvement was also obtained in proposed phoneme-based subwords with the syllabification algorithm and SpecAugment data augmentation technique. The word error rate (WER) reduction was 18.38% compared to character-based acoustic modeling with the word-based recurrent neural network language modeling (RNNLM) baseline. These phoneme-based subword models are also useful to improve machine and speech translation tasks.


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