TY - UNPB
T1 - Analyzing autoencoder-based acoustic word embeddings
AU - Matusevych, Y.
AU - Kamper, H.
AU - Goldwater, S.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Recent studies have introduced methods for learning acoustic word embeddings (AWEs)---fixed-size vector representations of words which encode their acoustic features. Despite the widespread use of AWEs in speech processing research, they have only been evaluated quantitatively in their ability to discriminate between whole word tokens. To better understand the applications of AWEs in various downstream tasks and in cognitive modeling, we need to analyze the representation spaces of AWEs. Here we analyze basic properties of AWE spaces learned by a sequence-to-sequence encoder-decoder model in six typologically diverse languages. We first show that these AWEs preserve some information about words' absolute duration and speaker. At the same time, the representation space of these AWEs is organized such that the distance between words' embeddings increases with those words' phonetic dissimilarity. Finally, the AWEs exhibit a word onset bias, similar to patterns reported in various studies on human speech processing and lexical access. We argue this is a promising result and encourage further evaluation of AWEs as a potentially useful tool in cognitive science, which could provide a link between speech processing and lexical memory.
AB - Recent studies have introduced methods for learning acoustic word embeddings (AWEs)---fixed-size vector representations of words which encode their acoustic features. Despite the widespread use of AWEs in speech processing research, they have only been evaluated quantitatively in their ability to discriminate between whole word tokens. To better understand the applications of AWEs in various downstream tasks and in cognitive modeling, we need to analyze the representation spaces of AWEs. Here we analyze basic properties of AWE spaces learned by a sequence-to-sequence encoder-decoder model in six typologically diverse languages. We first show that these AWEs preserve some information about words' absolute duration and speaker. At the same time, the representation space of these AWEs is organized such that the distance between words' embeddings increases with those words' phonetic dissimilarity. Finally, the AWEs exhibit a word onset bias, similar to patterns reported in various studies on human speech processing and lexical access. We argue this is a promising result and encourage further evaluation of AWEs as a potentially useful tool in cognitive science, which could provide a link between speech processing and lexical memory.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-85170314513&partnerID=MN8TOARS
U2 - 10.48550/arxiv.2004.01647
DO - 10.48550/arxiv.2004.01647
M3 - Preprint
BT - Analyzing autoencoder-based acoustic word embeddings
PB - arXiv
ER -