Emergent Mind

Domain Adaptation via Teacher-Student Learning for End-to-End Speech Recognition

(2001.01798)
Published Jan 6, 2020 in eess.AS , cs.CL , cs.LG , cs.NE , and cs.SD

Abstract

Teacher-student (T/S) has shown to be effective for domain adaptation of deep neural network acoustic models in hybrid speech recognition systems. In this work, we extend the T/S learning to large-scale unsupervised domain adaptation of an attention-based end-to-end (E2E) model through two levels of knowledge transfer: teacher's token posteriors as soft labels and one-best predictions as decoder guidance. To further improve T/S learning with the help of ground-truth labels, we propose adaptive T/S (AT/S) learning. Instead of conditionally choosing from either the teacher's soft token posteriors or the one-hot ground-truth label, in AT/S, the student always learns from both the teacher and the ground truth with a pair of adaptive weights assigned to the soft and one-hot labels quantifying the confidence on each of the knowledge sources. The confidence scores are dynamically estimated at each decoder step as a function of the soft and one-hot labels. With 3400 hours parallel close-talk and far-field Microsoft Cortana data for domain adaptation, T/S and AT/S achieve 6.3% and 10.3% relative word error rate improvement over a strong E2E model trained with the same amount of far-field data.

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