Publication | Open Access
Feature Learning in Deep Neural Networks - Studies on Speech Recognition Tasks
177
Citations
17
References
2013
Year
Convolutional Neural NetworkEngineeringMachine LearningNeural Networks (Machine Learning)Gaussian Mixture ModelsRecurrent Neural NetworkRepresentation LearningSpeech Recognition TasksSpeech RecognitionData ScienceRobust Speech RecognitionVoice RecognitionHealth SciencesFeature LearningNetwork DepthComputer ScienceDeep LearningDistant Speech RecognitionSpeech CommunicationDeep Neural NetworksMulti-speaker Speech RecognitionSpeech ProcessingSpeech InputSpeech Perception
Recent studies have shown that deep neural networks (DNNs) perform significantly better than shallow networks and Gaussian mixture models (GMMs) on large vocabulary speech recognition tasks. In this paper, we argue that the improved accuracy achieved by the DNNs is the result of their ability to extract discriminative internal representations that are robust to the many sources of variability in speech signals. We show that these representations become increasingly insensitive to small perturbations in the input with increasing network depth, which leads to better speech recognition performance with deeper networks. We also show that DNNs cannot extrapolate to test samples that are substantially different from the training examples. If the training data are sufficiently representative, however, internal features learned by the DNN are relatively stable with respect to speaker differences, bandwidth differences, and environment distortion. This enables DNN-based recognizers to perform as well or better than state-of-the-art systems based on GMMs or shallow networks without the need for explicit model adaptation or feature normalization.
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