End-to-End Speech Translation for Code Switched Speech
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Code switching (CS) refers to the phenomenon of interchangeably using words and phrases from different languages. CS can pose significant accuracy challenges to NLP, due to the often monolingual nature of the underlying systems. In this work, we focus on CS in the context of English/Spanish conversations for the task of speech translation (ST), generating and evaluating both transcript and translation. To evaluate model performance on this task, we create a novel ST corpus derived from existing public data sets. We explore various ST architectures across two dimensions: cascaded (transcribe then translate) vs end-to-end (jointly transcribe and translate) and unidirectional (source -> target) vs bidirectional (source <-> target). We show that our ST architectures, and especially our bidirectional end-to-end architecture, perform well on CS speech, even when no CS training data is used.
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Adding Robust Code-Switching Capabilities to High Performance Multilingual ASR
Proposes Bayesian factorized adaptation for multilingual ASR to handle code-switching, reporting 32.87% fewer errors on switched words and 5.31% better overall WER while preserving monolingual accuracy with small synt...
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