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+ ---
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+ language: en
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+ datasets:
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+ - superb
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+ tags:
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+ - speech
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+ - audio
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+ - wav2vec2
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+ - audio-classification
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+ license: apache-2.0
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+ ---
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+
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+ # Wav2Vec2-Base for Emotion Recognition
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+
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+ ## Model description
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+
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+ This is a ported version of
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+ [S3PRL's Wav2Vec2 for the SUPERB Emotion Recognition task](https://github.com/s3prl/s3prl/tree/master/s3prl/downstream/emotion).
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+
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+ The base model is [wav2vec2-base](https://huggingface.co/facebook/wav2vec2-base), which is pretrained on 16kHz
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+ sampled speech audio. When using the model make sure that your speech input is also sampled at 16Khz.
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+
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+ For more information refer to [SUPERB: Speech processing Universal PERformance Benchmark](https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.01051)
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+
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+ ## Task and dataset description
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+
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+ Emotion Recognition (ER) predicts an emotion class for each utterance. The most widely used ER dataset
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+ [IEMOCAP](https://sail.usc.edu/iemocap/) is adopted, and we follow the conventional evaluation protocol:
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+ we drop the unbalanced emotion classes to leave the final four classes with a similar amount of data points and
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+ cross-validate on five folds of the standard splits.
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+
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+ For the original model's training and evaluation instructions refer to the
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+ [S3PRL downstream task README](https://github.com/s3prl/s3prl/tree/master/s3prl/downstream#er-emotion-recognition).
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+
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+
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+ ## Usage examples
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+
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+ You can use the model via the Audio Classification pipeline:
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+ ```python
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+ from datasets import load_dataset
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+ from transformers import pipeline
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+
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+ dataset = load_dataset("anton-l/superb_demo", "er", split="session1")
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+
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+ classifier = pipeline("audio-classification", model="superb/wav2vec2-base-superb-er")
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+ labels = classifier(dataset[0]["file"], top_k=5)
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+ ```
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+
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+ Or use the model directly:
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+ ```python
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+ import torch
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+ import librosa
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+ from datasets import load_dataset
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+ from transformers import Wav2Vec2ForSequenceClassification, Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor
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+
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+ def map_to_array(example):
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+ speech, _ = librosa.load(example["file"], sr=16000, mono=True)
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+ example["speech"] = speech
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+ return example
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+
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+ # load a demo dataset and read audio files
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+ dataset = load_dataset("anton-l/superb_demo", "er", split="session1")
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+ dataset = dataset.map(map_to_array)
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+
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+ model = Wav2Vec2ForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("superb/wav2vec2-base-superb-er")
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+ feature_extractor = Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor.from_pretrained("superb/wav2vec2-base-superb-er")
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+
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+ # compute attention masks and normalize the waveform if needed
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+ inputs = feature_extractor(dataset[:4]["speech"], sampling_rate=16000, padding=True, return_tensors="pt")
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+
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+ logits = model(**inputs).logits
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+ predicted_ids = torch.argmax(logits, dim=-1)
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+ labels = [model.config.id2label[_id] for _id in predicted_ids.tolist()]
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+ ```
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+
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+ ## Eval results
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+
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+ The evaluation metric is accuracy.
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+
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+ | | **s3prl** | **transformers** |
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+ |--------|-----------|------------------|
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+ |**session1**| `0.6343` | `0.6258` |
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+
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+ ### BibTeX entry and citation info
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+
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+ ```bibtex
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+ @article{yang2021superb,
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+ title={SUPERB: Speech processing Universal PERformance Benchmark},
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+ author={Yang, Shu-wen and Chi, Po-Han and Chuang, Yung-Sung and Lai, Cheng-I Jeff and Lakhotia, Kushal and Lin, Yist Y and Liu, Andy T and Shi, Jiatong and Chang, Xuankai and Lin, Guan-Ting and others},
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+ journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2105.01051},
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+ year={2021}
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+ }
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+ ```