Spoken language change detection inspired by speaker change detection

J Mishra, SRM Prasanna - Circuits, Systems, and Signal Processing, 2024 - Springer
Circuits, Systems, and Signal Processing, 2024Springer
Spoken language change detection (LCD) refers to identifying the language transitions in a
code-switched utterance. Similarly, identifying the speaker transitions in a multispeaker
utterance is known as speaker change detection (SCD). Since tasks-wise both are similar,
the architecture/framework developed for the SCD task may be suitable for the LCD task.
Hence, the aim of the present work is to develop LCD systems inspired by SCD. Initially,
both LCD and SCD are performed by humans. The study suggests humans require (a) a …
Abstract
Spoken language change detection (LCD) refers to identifying the language transitions in a code-switched utterance. Similarly, identifying the speaker transitions in a multispeaker utterance is known as speaker change detection (SCD). Since tasks-wise both are similar, the architecture/framework developed for the SCD task may be suitable for the LCD task. Hence, the aim of the present work is to develop LCD systems inspired by SCD. Initially, both LCD and SCD are performed by humans. The study suggests humans require (a) a larger duration around the change point and (b) language-specific prior exposure, for performing LCD as compared to SCD. The larger duration requirement is incorporated by increasing the analysis window length of the unsupervised distance-based approach. This leads to a relative performance improvement of and , and a priori language knowledge provides a relative improvement of and on the synthetic and practical codeswitched datasets, respectively. The performance difference between the practical and synthetic datasets is mostly due to differences in the distribution of the monolingual segment duration.
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