Národní úložiště šedé literatury Nalezeno 2 záznamů.  Hledání trvalo 0.00 vteřin. 
Multi-Task Neural Networks for Speech Recognition
Egorova, Ekaterina ; Veselý, Karel (oponent) ; Karafiát, Martin (vedoucí práce)
The first part of this Master's thesis covers theoretical investigation into the principles and usage of neural networks, including their usability for the speech recognition tasks. Then it proceeds to summarize the multi-task neural networks' operating principles and some recent experiments with them. The practical part of the semester project reports changes made to a tool for neural network training which support multi-task training. Then the preparation of the settings is described, including a number of scripts written especially for this purpose. The experiments presented in the thesis explore the idea of using articulatory characteristics of phonemes as secondary tasks for multi-task training. The experiments are conducted on two different datasets of different quality and size and representing different languages - English and Vietnamese. Articulatory characteristics are occasionally combined with different secondary tasks, such as context, to see how well they function together. A comparison is made between the networks of different sizes to see how their size affects the effectiveness of multi-task training. These experiments show that multi-task training with the use of articulatory characteristics as secondary tasks can enhance training and yield better phoneme accuracy as a result. Finally, multi-task training is embedded to a speech recognition system as a feature extractor.
Multi-Task Neural Networks for Speech Recognition
Egorova, Ekaterina ; Veselý, Karel (oponent) ; Karafiát, Martin (vedoucí práce)
The first part of this Master's thesis covers theoretical investigation into the principles and usage of neural networks, including their usability for the speech recognition tasks. Then it proceeds to summarize the multi-task neural networks' operating principles and some recent experiments with them. The practical part of the semester project reports changes made to a tool for neural network training which support multi-task training. Then the preparation of the settings is described, including a number of scripts written especially for this purpose. The experiments presented in the thesis explore the idea of using articulatory characteristics of phonemes as secondary tasks for multi-task training. The experiments are conducted on two different datasets of different quality and size and representing different languages - English and Vietnamese. Articulatory characteristics are occasionally combined with different secondary tasks, such as context, to see how well they function together. A comparison is made between the networks of different sizes to see how their size affects the effectiveness of multi-task training. These experiments show that multi-task training with the use of articulatory characteristics as secondary tasks can enhance training and yield better phoneme accuracy as a result. Finally, multi-task training is embedded to a speech recognition system as a feature extractor.

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