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Learning Speech Variability in Discriminative Acoustic Model Adaptation

Shoei SATO
Takahiro OKU
Shinichi HOMMA
Akio KOBAYASHI
Toru IMAI

Publication
IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information and Systems   Vol.E93-D    No.9    pp.2370-2378
Publication Date: 2010/09/01
Online ISSN: 1745-1361
DOI: 10.1587/transinf.E93.D.2370
Print ISSN: 0916-8532
Type of Manuscript: Special Section PAPER (Special Section on Processing Natural Speech Variability for Improved Verbal Human-Computer Interaction)
Category: Adaptation
Keyword: 
speech recognition,  speech variability,  discriminative training,  acoustic model,  

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Summary: 
We present a new discriminative method of acoustic model adaptation that deals with a task-dependent speech variability. We have focused on differences of expressions or speaking styles between tasks and set the objective of this method as improving the recognition accuracy of indistinctly pronounced phrases dependent on a speaking style. The adaptation appends subword models for frequently observable variants of subwords in the task. To find the task-dependent variants, low-confidence words are statistically selected from words with higher frequency in the task's adaptation data by using their word lattices. HMM parameters of subword models dependent on the words are discriminatively trained by using linear transforms with a minimum phoneme error (MPE) criterion. For the MPE training, subword accuracy discriminating between the variants and the originals is also investigated. In speech recognition experiments, the proposed adaptation with the subword variants reduced the word error rate by 12.0% relative in a Japanese conversational broadcast task.


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