Language-agnostic Code-Switching in Sequence-To-Sequence Speech Recognition

17 Oct 2022  ·  Enes Yavuz Ugan, Christian Huber, Juan Hussain, Alexander Waibel ·

Code-Switching (CS) is referred to the phenomenon of alternately using words and phrases from different languages. While today's neural end-to-end (E2E) models deliver state-of-the-art performances on the task of automatic speech recognition (ASR) it is commonly known that these systems are very data-intensive. However, there is only a few transcribed and aligned CS speech available. To overcome this problem and train multilingual systems which can transcribe CS speech, we propose a simple yet effective data augmentation in which audio and corresponding labels of different source languages are concatenated. By using this training data, our E2E model improves on transcribing CS speech. It also surpasses monolingual models on monolingual tests. The results show that this augmentation technique can even improve the model's performance on inter-sentential language switches not seen during training by 5,03% WER.

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