Device Directedness with Contextual Cues for Spoken Dialog Systems
read the original abstract
In this work, we define barge-in verification as a supervised learning task where audio-only information is used to classify user spoken dialogue into true and false barge-ins. Following the success of pre-trained models, we use low-level speech representations from a self-supervised representation learning model for our downstream classification task. Further, we propose a novel technique to infuse lexical information directly into speech representations to improve the domain-specific language information implicitly learned during pre-training. Experiments conducted on spoken dialog data show that our proposed model trained to validate barge-in entirely from speech representations is faster by 38% relative and achieves 4.5% relative F1 score improvement over a baseline LSTM model that uses both audio and Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) 1-best hypotheses. On top of this, our best proposed model with lexically infused representations along with contextual features provides a further relative improvement of 5.7% in the F1 score but only 22% faster than the baseline.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.