Classification Of Spontaneous And Scripted Speech For Multilingual Audio

Abstract

Distinguishing scripted from spontaneous speech is an essential tool for better understanding how speech styles influence speech processing research. It can also improve recommendation systems and discovery experiences for media users through better segmentation of large recorded speech catalogues. This paper addresses the challenge of building a classifier that generalises well across different formats and languages. We systematically evaluate models ranging from traditional, handcrafted acoustic and prosodic features to advanced audio transformers, utilising a large, multilingual proprietary podcast dataset for training and validation. We break down the performance of each model across 11 language groups to evaluate cross-lingual biases. Our experimental analysis extends to publicly available datasets to assess the models’ generalisability to non-podcast domains. Our results indicate that transformer-based models consistently outperform traditional feature-based techniques, achieving state-of-the-art performance in distinguishing between scripted and spontaneous speech across various languages.

Related

November 2024 | SIAM Journal on Mathematics of Data Science

Topological Fingerprints for Audio Identification

Wojciech Reise, Ximena Fernández, Maria Dominguez, Heather A. Harrington, Mariano Beguerisse-Díaz

October 2024 | CIKM

PODTILE: Facilitating Podcast Episode Browsing with Auto-generated Chapters

A. Ghazimatin, E. Garmash, G. Penha, K. Sheets, M. Achenbach, O. Semerci, R. Galvez, M. Tannenberg, S. Mantravadi, D. Narayanan, O. Kalaydzhyan, D. Cole, B. Carterette, A. Clifton, P. N. Bennett, C. Hauff, M. Lalmas-Roelleke

October 2024 | Journal of Online Trust & Safety

Algorithmic Impact Assessments at Scale: Practitioners’ Challenges and Needs

Amar Ashar, Karim Ginena, Maria Cipollone, Renata Barreto, Henriette Cramer