This is an open source project (formerly named Listen, Attend and Spell - PyTorch Implementation) for end-to-end ASR by Tzu-Wei Sung and me. Implementation was mostly done with Pytorch, the well known deep learning toolkit.
The end-to-end ASR was based on Listen, Attend and Spell1. Multiple techniques proposed recently were also implemented, serving as additional plug-ins for better performance. For the list of techniques implemented, please refer to the highlights, configuration and references.
Feel free to use/modify them, any bug report or improvement suggestion will be appreciated. If you find this project helpful for your research, please do consider to cite our paper, thanks!
-
Feature Extraction
- On-the-fly feature extraction using torchaudio as backend
- Character/subword2/word encoding of text
-
Training End-to-end ASR
- Seq2seq ASR with different types of encoder/attention3
- CTC-based ASR4, which can also be hybrid5 with the former
- yaml-styled model construction and hyper parameters setting
- Training process visualization with TensorBoard, including attention alignment
-
Speech Recognition with End-to-end ASR (i.e. Decoding)
- Beam search decoding
- RNN language model training and joint decoding for ASR6
- Joint CTC-attention based decoding6
- Greedy decoding & CTC beam search contributed by Heng-Jui (Harry) Chang
You may checkout some example log files with TensorBoard by downloading them from coming soon
- Python 3
- Computing power (high-end GPU) and memory space (both RAM/GPU's RAM) is extremely important if you'd like to train your own model.
- Required packages and their use are listed requirements.txt.
You may use the text encoders provided at tests/sample_data/
and skip this step.
The subword model is trained with sentencepiece
. As for character/word model, you have to generate the vocabulary file containing the vocabulary line by line. You may also use util/generate_vocab_file.py
so that you only have to prepare a text file, which contains all texts you want to use for generating the vocabulary file or subword model. Please update data.text.*
field in the config file if you want to change the mode or vocabulary file. For subword model, use the one ended with .model
as vocab_file
.
python3 util/generate_vocab_file.py --input_file TEXT_FILE \
--output_file OUTPUT_FILE \
--vocab_size VOCAB_SIZE \
--mode MODE
For more details, please refer to python3 util/generate_vocab_file.py -h
.
All the parameters related to training/decoding will be stored in a yaml file. Hyperparameter tuning and experiments can be managed easily this way. See documentation and examples for the exact format. Note that the example configs provided were not fine-tuned, you may want to write your own config for best performance.
Once the config file is ready, run the following command to train end-to-end ASR (or language model)
python3 main.py --config <path of config file>
For example, train an ASR on LibriSpeech and watch the log with
# Checkout options available
python3 main.py -h
# Start training with specific config
python3 main.py --config config/libri/asr_example.yaml
# Open TensorBoard to see log
tensorboard --logdir log/
# Train an external language model
python3 main.py --config config/libri/lm_example.yaml --lm
All settings will be parsed from the config file automatically to start training, the log file can be accessed through TensorBoard. Please notice that the error rate reported on the TensorBoard is biased (see issue #10), you should run the testing phase in order to get the true performance of model. Options available in this phase include the followings
Options | Description |
---|---|
config | Path of config file. |
seed | Random seed, note this is an option that affects the result |
name | Experiments for logging and saving model. By default it's |
logdir | Path to store training logs (log files for tensorboard), default log/ . |
ckpdir | The directory to store model, default ckpt/ . |
njobs | Number of workers used for data loader, consider increase this if you find data preprocessing takes most of your training time, default using 6 . |
no-ping | Disable the pin-memory option of pytorch dataloader. |
cpu | CPU-only mode, not recommended, use it for debugging. |
no-msg | Hide all message from stdout. |
lm | Switch to rnnlm training mode. |
test | Switch to decoding mode (do not use during training phase) |
cudnn-ctc | Use CuDNN as the backend of PyTorch CTC. Unstable, see this issue, not sure if solved in latest Pytorch with cudnn version > 7.6 |
To test a model, run the following command
python3 main.py --config <path of config file> --test --njobs <int>
Please notice that the decoding is performed without batch processing, use more workers to speedup at the cost of using more RAM.
By default, recognition result will be stored at result/<name>/
as two csv files with auto-naming according to the decoding config file. output.csv
will store the best hypothesis provided by ASR and beam.csv
will recored the top hypotheses during beam search. The result file may be evaluated with eval.py
. For example, test the example ASR trained on LibriSpeech and check performance with
python3 main.py --config config/libri/decode_example.yaml --test --njobs 8
# Check WER/CER
python3 eval.py --file result/asr_example_sd0_dev_output.csv
Most of the options work similar to training phase except the followings:
Options | Description |
---|---|
test | Must be enabled |
config | Path to the decoding config file. |
outdir | Path to store decode result. |
njobs | Number of threads used for decoding, very important in terms of efficiency. Large value equals fast decoding yet RAM/GPU RAM expensive. |
-
Loss becomes
nan
right after training beginsFor CTC,
len(pred)>len(label)
is necessary. Also consider setzero_infinity=True
fortorch.nn.CTCLoss
- Provide examples
- Pure CTC training / CTC beam decode bug (out-of-candidate)
- Greedy decoding
- Customized dataset
- Util. scripts
- Finish CLM migration and reference
- Store preprocessed dataset on RAM
- Parts of the implementation refer to ESPnet, a great end-to-end speech processing toolkit by Watanabe et al.
- Special thanks to William Chan, the first author of LAS, for answering my questions during implementation.
- Thanks xiaoming, Odie Ko, b-etienne, Jinserk Baik and Zhong-Yi Li for identifying several issues in our implementation.
- Listen, Attend and Spell, W Chan et al.
- Neural Machine Translation of Rare Words with Subword Units, R Sennrich et al.
- Attention-Based Models for Speech Recognition, J Chorowski et al.
- Connectionist Temporal Classification: Labelling Unsegmented Sequence Data with Recurrent Neural Networks, A Graves et al.
- Joint CTC-Attention based End-to-End Speech Recognition using Multi-task Learning, S Kim et al.
- Advances in Joint CTC-Attention based End-to-End Speech Recognition with a Deep CNN Encoder and RNN-LM, T Hori et al.
@inproceedings{liu2019adversarial,
title={Adversarial Training of End-to-end Speech Recognition Using a Criticizing Language Model},
author={Liu, Alexander and Lee, Hung-yi and Lee, Lin-shan},
booktitle={Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP)},
year={2019},
organization={IEEE}
}
@misc{alex2019sequencetosequence,
title={Sequence-to-sequence Automatic Speech Recognition with Word Embedding Regularization and Fused Decoding},
author={Alexander H. Liu and Tzu-Wei Sung and Shun-Po Chuang and Hung-yi Lee and Lin-shan Lee},
year={2019},
eprint={1910.12740},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}