ccc-Wav2Vec2-360h-Base-100h
The base model pretrained on 360 hours of Librispeech and fine-tuned on 100 hours of Librispeech on 16kHz sampled speech audio. When using the model make sure that your speech input is also sampled at 16Khz.
Authors: Vasista Sai Lodagala, Sreyan Ghosh, S. Umesh
Abstract While Self-Supervised Learning has helped reap the benefit of the scale from the available unlabeled data, the learning paradigms are continuously being bettered. We present a new pre-training strategy named ccc-wav2vec 2.0, which uses clustering and an augmentation-based cross-contrastive loss as its self-supervised objective. Through the clustering module, we scale down the influence of those negative examples that are highly similar to the positive. The Cross-Contrastive loss is computed between the encoder output of the original sample and the quantizer output of its augmentation and vice-versa, bringing robustness to the pre-training strategy. ccc-wav2vec 2.0 achieves up to 15.6% and 12.7% relative WER improvement over the baseline wav2vec 2.0 on the test-clean and test-other sets, respectively, of LibriSpeech, without the use of any language model. The proposed method also achieves up to 14.9% relative WER improvement over the baseline wav2vec 2.0 when fine-tuned on Switchboard data. GitHub Page: https://github.com/speech-lab-iitm/ccc-wav2vec-2.0.
Usage
To transcribe audio files the model can be used as a standalone acoustic model as follows:
from transformers import Wav2Vec2Processor, Wav2Vec2ForCTC
from datasets import load_dataset
import torch
# load model and tokenizer
processor = Wav2Vec2Processor.from_pretrained("vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-100h")
model = Wav2Vec2ForCTC.from_pretrained("vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-100h")
# load dummy dataset and read soundfiles
ds = load_dataset("patrickvonplaten/librispeech_asr_dummy", "clean", split="validation")
# tokenize
input_values = processor(ds[0]["audio"]["array"], return_tensors="pt", padding="longest").input_values # Batch size 1
# retrieve logits
logits = model(input_values).logits
# take argmax and decode
predicted_ids = torch.argmax(logits, dim=-1)
transcription = processor.batch_decode(predicted_ids)
Evaluation
This code snippet shows how to evaluate vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-100h on LibriSpeech's "clean" and "other" test data.
from datasets import load_dataset
from transformers import Wav2Vec2ForCTC, Wav2Vec2Processor
import torch
from jiwer import wer
librispeech_eval = load_dataset("librispeech_asr", "clean", split="test")
model = Wav2Vec2ForCTC.from_pretrained("vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-100h").to("cuda")
processor = Wav2Vec2Processor.from_pretrained("vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-100h")
def map_to_pred(batch):
input_values = processor(batch["audio"]["array"], return_tensors="pt", padding="longest").input_values
with torch.no_grad():
logits = model(input_values.to("cuda")).logits
predicted_ids = torch.argmax(logits, dim=-1)
transcription = processor.batch_decode(predicted_ids)
batch["transcription"] = transcription
return batch
result = librispeech_eval.map(map_to_pred, batched=True, batch_size=1, remove_columns=["audio"])
print("WER:", wer(result["text"], result["transcription"]))
Result (WER):
"clean" | "other" |
---|---|
10.8 | 27.7 |
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Dataset used to train vasista22/ccc-wav2vec2-360h-base-ft-100h
Evaluation results
- Test WER on LibriSpeech (clean)test set self-reported10.800
- Test WER on LibriSpeech (other)test set self-reported27.700