
arXiv: 2406.07133
Visually grounded speech models link speech to images. We extend this connection by linking images to text via an existing image captioning system, and as a result gain the ability to map speech audio directly to text. This approach can be used for speech translation with just images by having the audio in a different language from the generated captions. We investigate such a system on a real low-resource language, Yorùbá, and propose a Yorùbá-to-English speech translation model that leverages pretrained components in order to be able to learn in the low-resource regime. To limit overfitting, we find that it is essential to use a decoding scheme that produces diverse image captions for training. Results show that the predicted translations capture the main semantics of the spoken audio, albeit in a simpler and shorter form.
Accepted at Interspeech 2024
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Sound (cs.SD), Computer Science - Computation and Language, Audio and Speech Processing (eess.AS), FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Computation and Language (cs.CL), Computer Science - Sound, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Sound (cs.SD), Computer Science - Computation and Language, Audio and Speech Processing (eess.AS), FOS: Electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering, Computation and Language (cs.CL), Computer Science - Sound, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing
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