--- language: en datasets: - superb tags: - speech - audio - wav2vec2 - audio-classification license: apache-2.0 widget: - example_title: Speech Commands "down" src: https://cdn-media.huggingface.co/speech_samples/keyword_spotting_down.wav - example_title: Speech Commands "go" src: https://cdn-media.huggingface.co/speech_samples/keyword_spotting_go.wav --- # Wav2Vec2-Large for Keyword Spotting ## Model description This is a ported version of [S3PRL's Wav2Vec2 for the SUPERB Keyword Spotting task](https://github.com/s3prl/s3prl/tree/master/s3prl/downstream/speech_commands). The base model is [wav2vec2-large-lv60](https://huggingface.co/facebook/wav2vec2-large-lv60), which is pretrained on 16kHz sampled speech audio. When using the model make sure that your speech input is also sampled at 16Khz. For more information refer to [SUPERB: Speech processing Universal PERformance Benchmark](https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.01051) ## Task and dataset description Keyword Spotting (KS) detects preregistered keywords by classifying utterances into a predefined set of words. The task is usually performed on-device for the fast response time. Thus, accuracy, model size, and inference time are all crucial. SUPERB uses the widely used [Speech Commands dataset v1.0](https://www.tensorflow.org/datasets/catalog/speech_commands) for the task. The dataset consists of ten classes of keywords, a class for silence, and an unknown class to include the false positive. For the original model's training and evaluation instructions refer to the [S3PRL downstream task README](https://github.com/s3prl/s3prl/tree/master/s3prl/downstream#ks-keyword-spotting). ## Usage examples You can use the model via the Audio Classification pipeline: ```python from datasets import load_dataset from transformers import pipeline dataset = load_dataset("anton-l/superb_demo", "ks", split="test") classifier = pipeline("audio-classification", model="superb/wav2vec2-large-superb-ks") labels = classifier(dataset[0]["file"], top_k=5) ``` Or use the model directly: ```python import torch from datasets import load_dataset from transformers import Wav2Vec2ForSequenceClassification, Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor from torchaudio.sox_effects import apply_effects_file effects = [["channels", "1"], ["rate", "16000"], ["gain", "-3.0"]] def map_to_array(example): speech, _ = apply_effects_file(example["file"], effects) example["speech"] = speech.squeeze(0).numpy() return example # load a demo dataset and read audio files dataset = load_dataset("anton-l/superb_demo", "ks", split="test") dataset = dataset.map(map_to_array) model = Wav2Vec2ForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("superb/wav2vec2-large-superb-ks") feature_extractor = Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor.from_pretrained("superb/wav2vec2-large-superb-ks") # compute attention masks and normalize the waveform if needed inputs = feature_extractor(dataset[:4]["speech"], sampling_rate=16000, padding=True, return_tensors="pt") logits = model(**inputs).logits predicted_ids = torch.argmax(logits, dim=-1) labels = [model.config.id2label[_id] for _id in predicted_ids.tolist()] ``` ## Eval results The evaluation metric is accuracy. | | **s3prl** | **transformers** | |--------|-----------|------------------| |**test**| `0.9666` | `N/A` | ### BibTeX entry and citation info ```bibtex @article{yang2021superb, title={SUPERB: Speech processing Universal PERformance Benchmark}, 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}, journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2105.01051}, year={2021} } ```