4.2 Article

Improving low-resource Tibetan end-to-end ASR by multilingual and multilevel unit modeling

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s13636-021-00233-4

Keywords

Transfer learning; End-to-end; Multilingual speech recognition; Low-resource language; Lhasa dialect

Funding

  1. National Key R and D Program of China [2018YFB1305200]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61771333]
  3. Tianjin Municipal Science and Technology Project [18ZXZNGX00330]

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This paper aims to improve the speech recognition performance of the low-resource Lhasa dialect by adopting multilingual speech recognition technology on the E2E structure based on the transfer learning framework. Using transfer learning, a monolingual E2E ASR system for the Lhasa dialect is established, and a multilingual E2E ASR system is proposed for the first time. Experimental results show that the proposed method-based ASR system exceeds the E2E baseline ASR system in performance.
Conventional automatic speech recognition (ASR) and emerging end-to-end (E2E) speech recognition have achieved promising results after being provided with sufficient resources. However, for low-resource language, the current ASR is still challenging. The Lhasa dialect is the most widespread Tibetan dialect and has a wealth of speakers and transcriptions. Hence, it is meaningful to apply the ASR technique to the Lhasa dialect for historical heritage protection and cultural exchange. Previous work on Tibetan speech recognition focused on selecting phone-level acoustic modeling units and incorporating tonal information but underestimated the influence of limited data. The purpose of this paper is to improve the speech recognition performance of the low-resource Lhasa dialect by adopting multilingual speech recognition technology on the E2E structure based on the transfer learning framework. Using transfer learning, we first establish a monolingual E2E ASR system for the Lhasa dialect with different source languages to initialize the ASR model to compare the positive effects of source languages on the Tibetan ASR model. We further propose a multilingual E2E ASR system by utilizing initialization strategies with different source languages and multilevel units, which is proposed for the first time. Our experiments show that the performance of the proposed method-based ASR system exceeds that of the E2E baseline ASR system. Our proposed method effectively models the low-resource Lhasa dialect and achieves a relative 14.2% performance improvement in character error rate (CER) compared to DNN-HMM systems. Moreover, from the best monolingual E2E model to the best multilingual E2E model of the Lhasa dialect, the system's performance increased by 8.4% in CER.

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