jackyguo624 / espnet

End-to-End Speech Processing Toolkit

Home Page:https://espnet.github.io/espnet/

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ESPnet: end-to-end speech processing toolkit

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Docs | Example | Example (ESPnet2) | Docker | Notebook | Tutorial (2019)

ESPnet is an end-to-end speech processing toolkit, mainly focuses on end-to-end speech recognition and end-to-end text-to-speech. ESPnet uses chainer and pytorch as a main deep learning engine, and also follows Kaldi style data processing, feature extraction/format, and recipes to provide a complete setup for speech recognition and other speech processing experiments.

Key Features

Kaldi style complete recipe

  • Support numbers of ASR recipes (WSJ, Switchboard, CHiME-4/5, Librispeech, TED, CSJ, AMI, HKUST, Voxforge, REVERB, etc.)
  • Support numbers of TTS recipes with a similar manner to the ASR recipe (LJSpeech, LibriTTS, M-AILABS, etc.)
  • Support numbers of ST recipes (Fisher-CallHome Spanish, Libri-trans, IWSLT'18, How2, Must-C, Mboshi-French, etc.)
  • Support numbers of MT recipes (IWSLT'16, the above ST recipes etc.)
  • Support speech separation and recognition recipe (WSJ-2mix)
  • Support voice conversion recipe (VCC2020 baseline) (new!)

ASR: Automatic Speech Recognition

  • State-of-the-art performance in several ASR benchmarks (comparable/superior to hybrid DNN/HMM and CTC)
  • Hybrid CTC/attention based end-to-end ASR
    • Fast/accurate training with CTC/attention multitask training
    • CTC/attention joint decoding to boost monotonic alignment decoding
    • Encoder: VGG-like CNN + BiRNN (LSTM/GRU), sub-sampling BiRNN (LSTM/GRU) or Transformer
  • Attention: Dot product, location-aware attention, variants of multihead
  • Incorporate RNNLM/LSTMLM/TransformerLM/N-gram trained only with text data
  • Batch GPU decoding
  • Transducer based end-to-end ASR
    • Available: RNN-Transducer, Transformer-Transducer, mixed Transformer/RNN-Transducer
    • Also support: attention mechanism (RNN-decoder), pre-init w/ LM (RNN-decoder), VGG-Transformer (encoder)
  • CTC forced alignment

TTS: Text-to-speech

  • Tacotron2 based end-to-end TTS
  • Transformer based end-to-end TTS
  • Feed-forward Transformer (a.k.a. FastSpeech) based end-to-end TTS
  • Multi-speaker TTS with pretrained speaker embedding
  • Support phoneme-based TTS for En, Jp, and Zn
  • Integration with neural vocoders such as WaveNet, ParallelWaveGAN, and (Multi-band) MelGAN

To train the neural vocoder, please check the following repositories:

ST: Speech Translation & MT: Machine Translation

  • State-of-the-art performance in several ST benchmarks (comparable/superior to cascaded ASR and MT)
  • Transformer based end-to-end ST (new!)
  • Transformer based end-to-end MT (new!)

VC: Voice conversion

  • End-to-end VC based on cascaded ASR+TTS (new!)
  • Baseline system for Voice Conversion Challenge 2020!

DNN Framework

  • Flexible network architecture thanks to chainer and pytorch
  • Flexible front-end processing thanks to kaldiio and HDF5 support
  • Tensorboard based monitoring

ESPnet2

See ESPnet2.

  • Indepedent from Kaldi/Chainer
  • On the fly feature extraction and text processing when training
  • Multi GPUs training on single/multi nodes (Distributed training)
  • A template recipe which can be applied for all corpora
  • Possible to train any size of corpus without cpu memory error

Installation

  • If you intend to do full experiments including DNN training, then see Installation.
  • If you just need the Python module only:
    pip install torch  # Install some dependencies manually
    pip install espnet
    # To install latest
    # pip install git+https://github.com/espnet/espnet

Usage

See Usage.

Docker Container

go to docker/ and follow instructions.

Contribution

Thank you for taking times for ESPnet! Any contributions to ESPNet are welcome and feel free to ask any questions or requests to issues. If it's the first contribution to ESPnet for you, please follow the contribution guide.

Results and demo

You can find useful tutorials and demos in Interspeech 2019 Tutorial

ASR results

expand

We list the character error rate (CER) and word error rate (WER) of major ASR tasks.

Task CER (%) WER (%) Pretrained model
Aishell dev 6.0 N/A link
Aishell test 6.6 N/A same as above
Common Voice dev 1.7 2.2 link
Common Voice test 1.8 2.3 same as above
CSJ eval1 5.7 N/A link
CSJ eval2 3.8 N/A same as above
CSJ eval3 4.2 N/A same as above
HKUST dev 23.5 N/A link
Librispeech dev_clean N/A 2.1 link
Librispeech dev_other N/A 5.3 same as above
Librispeech test_clean N/A 2.5 same as above
Librispeech test_other N/A 5.5 same as above
TEDLIUM2 dev N/A 9.3 link
TEDLIUM2 test N/A 8.1 same as above
TEDLIUM3 dev N/A 9.7 link
TEDLIUM3 test N/A 8.0 same as above
WSJ dev93 3.2 7.0 N/A
WSJ eval92 2.1 4.7 N/A

Note that the performance of the CSJ, HKUST, and Librispeech tasks was significantly improved by using the wide network (#units = 1024) and large subword units if necessary reported by RWTH.

If you want to check the results of the other recipes, please check egs/<name_of_recipe>/asr1/RESULTS.md.

ASR demo

expand

You can recognize speech in a WAV file using pretrained models. Go to a recipe directory and run utils/recog_wav.sh as follows:

# go to recipe directory and source path of espnet tools
cd egs/tedlium2/asr1 && . ./path.sh
# let's recognize speech!
recog_wav.sh --models tedlium2.transformer.v1 example.wav

where example.wav is a WAV file to be recognized. The sampling rate must be consistent with that of data used in training.

Available pretrained models in the demo script are listed as below.

Model Notes
tedlium2.rnn.v1 Streaming decoding based on CTC-based VAD
tedlium2.rnn.v2 Streaming decoding based on CTC-based VAD (batch decoding)
tedlium2.transformer.v1 Joint-CTC attention Transformer trained on Tedlium 2
tedlium3.transformer.v1 Joint-CTC attention Transformer trained on Tedlium 3
librispeech.transformer.v1 Joint-CTC attention Transformer trained on Librispeech
commonvoice.transformer.v1 Joint-CTC attention Transformer trained on CommonVoice
csj.transformer.v1 Joint-CTC attention Transformer trained on CSJ

ST results

expand

We list 4-gram BLEU of major ST tasks.

end-to-end system

Task BLEU Pretrained model
Fisher-CallHome Spanish fisher_test (Es->En) 48.39 link
Fisher-CallHome Spanish callhome_evltest (Es->En) 18.67 link
Libri-trans test (En->Fr) 16.70 link
How2 dev5 (En->Pt) 45.68 link
Must-C tst-COMMON (En->De) 22.91 link
Mboshi-French dev (Fr->Mboshi) 6.18 N/A

cascaded system

Task BLEU Pretrained model
Fisher-CallHome Spanish fisher_test (Es->En) 42.16 N/A
Fisher-CallHome Spanish callhome_evltest (Es->En) 19.82 N/A
Libri-trans test (En->Fr) 16.96 N/A
How2 dev5 (En->Pt) 44.90 N/A
Must-C tst-COMMON (En->De) 23.65 N/A

If you want to check the results of the other recipes, please check egs/<name_of_recipe>/st1/RESULTS.md.

ST demo

expand

(New!) We made a new real-time E2E-ST + TTS demonstration in Google Colab. Please access the notebook from the following button and enjoy the real-time speech-to-speech translation!

Open In Colab


You can translate speech in a WAV file using pretrained models. Go to a recipe directory and run utils/translate_wav.sh as follows:

# go to recipe directory and source path of espnet tools
cd egs/fisher_callhome_spanish/st1 && . ./path.sh
# download example wav file
wget -O - https://github.com/espnet/espnet/files/4100928/test.wav.tar.gz | tar zxvf -
# let's translate speech!
translate_wav.sh --models fisher_callhome_spanish.transformer.v1.es-en test.wav

where test.wav is a WAV file to be translated. The sampling rate must be consistent with that of data used in training.

Available pretrained models in the demo script are listed as below.

Model Notes
fisher_callhome_spanish.transformer.v1 Transformer-ST trained on Fisher-CallHome Spanish Es->En

MT results

expand
Task BLEU Pretrained model
Fisher-CallHome Spanish fisher_test (Es->En) 61.45 link
Fisher-CallHome Spanish callhome_evltest (Es->En) 29.86 link
Libri-trans test (En->Fr) 18.09 link
How2 dev5 (En->Pt) 58.61 link
Must-C tst-COMMON (En->De) 27.63 link
IWSLT'14 test2014 (En->De) 24.70 link
IWSLT'14 test2014 (De->En) 29.22 link
IWSLT'16 test2014 (En->De) 24.05 link
IWSLT'16 test2014 (De->En) 29.13 link

TTS results

expand

You can listen to our samples in demo HP espnet-tts-sample. Here we list some notable ones:

You can download all of the pretrained models and generated samples:

Note that in the generated samples we use the following vocoders: Griffin-Lim (GL), WaveNet vocoder (WaveNet), Parallel WaveGAN (ParallelWaveGAN), and MelGAN (MelGAN). The neural vocoders are based on following repositories.

If you want to build your own neural vocoder, please check the above repositories. kan-bayashi/ParallelWaveGAN provides the manual about how to decode ESPnet-TTS model's features with neural vocoders. Please check it.

Here we list all of the pretrained neural vocoders. Please download and enjoy the generation of high quality speech!

Model link Lang Fs [Hz] Mel range [Hz] FFT / Shift / Win [pt] Model type
ljspeech.wavenet.softmax.ns.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None Softmax WaveNet
ljspeech.wavenet.mol.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None MoL WaveNet
ljspeech.parallel_wavegan.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None Parallel WaveGAN
ljspeech.wavenet.mol.v2 EN 22.05k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None MoL WaveNet
ljspeech.parallel_wavegan.v2 EN 22.05k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None Parallel WaveGAN
ljspeech.melgan.v1 (EXPERIMENTAL) EN 22.05k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None MelGAN
ljspeech.melgan.v3 (EXPERIMENTAL) EN 22.05k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None MelGAN
libritts.wavenet.mol.v1 EN 24k None 1024 / 256 / None MoL WaveNet
jsut.wavenet.mol.v1 JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 MoL WaveNet
jsut.parallel_wavegan.v1 JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 Parallel WaveGAN
csmsc.wavenet.mol.v1 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 MoL WaveNet
csmsc.parallel_wavegan.v1 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 Parallel WaveGAN

If you want to use the above pretrained vocoders, please exactly match the feature setting with them.

TTS demo

expand

(New!) We made a new real-time E2E-TTS demonstration in Google Colab. Please access the notebook from the following button and enjoy the real-time synthesis!

Open In Colab


You can synthesize speech in a TXT file using pretrained models. Go to a recipe directory and run utils/synth_wav.sh as follows:

# go to recipe directory and source path of espnet tools
cd egs/ljspeech/tts1 && . ./path.sh
# we use upper-case char sequence for the default model.
echo "THIS IS A DEMONSTRATION OF TEXT TO SPEECH." > example.txt
# let's synthesize speech!
synth_wav.sh example.txt

# also you can use multiple sentences
echo "THIS IS A DEMONSTRATION OF TEXT TO SPEECH." > example_multi.txt
echo "TEXT TO SPEECH IS A TECHQNIQUE TO CONVERT TEXT INTO SPEECH." >> example_multi.txt
synth_wav.sh example_multi.txt

You can change the pretrained model as follows:

synth_wav.sh --models ljspeech.fastspeech.v1 example.txt

Waveform synthesis is performed with Griffin-Lim algorithm and neural vocoders (WaveNet and ParallelWaveGAN). You can change the pretrained vocoder model as follows:

synth_wav.sh --vocoder_models ljspeech.wavenet.mol.v1 example.txt

WaveNet vocoder provides very high quality speech but it takes time to generate.

Important Note:

This code does not include text frontend part. Please clean the input text manually. Also, you need to modify feature configuration according to the model. Default setting is for ljspeech models, so if you want to use other pretrained models, please modify the parameters by yourself. For our provided models, you can find them in the below table.

If you are beginner, instead of this script, I strongly recommend trying the colab notebook at first, which includes all of the procedure from text frontend, feature generation, and waveform generation.

Available pretrained models in the demo script are listed as follows:

Model link Lang Fs [Hz] Mel range [Hz] FFT / Shift / Win [pt] Input R Model type
ljspeech.tacotron2.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 2 Tacotron 2
ljspeech.tacotron2.v2 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 1 Tacotron 2 + forward attention
ljspeech.tacotron2.v3 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 1 Tacotron 2 + guided attention loss
ljspeech.transformer.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 1 Deep Transformer
ljspeech.transformer.v2 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 3 Shallow Transformer
ljspeech.transformer.v3 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None phn 1 Deep Transformer
ljspeech.fastspeech.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 1 FF-Transformer
ljspeech.fastspeech.v2 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None char 1 FF-Transformer + CNN in FFT block
ljspeech.fastspeech.v3 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None phn 1 FF-Transformer + CNN in FFT block + postnet
libritts.tacotron2.v1 EN 24k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None char 2 Multi-speaker Tacotron 2
libritts.transformer.v1 EN 24k 80-7600 1024 / 256 / None char 2 Multi-speaker Transformer
jsut.tacotron2 JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 phn 2 Tacotron 2
jsut.transformer JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 phn 3 Shallow Transformer
csmsc.transformer.v1 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 pinyin 1 Deep Transformer
csmsc.fastspeech.v3 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 pinyin 1 FF-Transformer + CNN in FFT block + postnet

Available pretrained vocoder models in the demo script are listed as follows:

Model link Lang Fs [Hz] Mel range [Hz] FFT / Shift / Win [pt] Model type
ljspeech.wavenet.softmax.ns.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None Softmax WaveNet
ljspeech.wavenet.mol.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None MoL WaveNet
ljspeech.parallel_wavegan.v1 EN 22.05k None 1024 / 256 / None Parallel WaveGAN
libritts.wavenet.mol.v1 EN 24k None 1024 / 256 / None MoL WaveNet
jsut.wavenet.mol.v1 JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 MoL WaveNet
jsut.parallel_wavegan.v1 JP 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 Parallel WaveGAN
csmsc.wavenet.mol.v1 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 MoL WaveNet
csmsc.parallel_wavegan.v1 ZH 24k 80-7600 2048 / 300 / 1200 Parallel WaveGAN

VC results

The Voice Conversion Challenge 2020 (VCC2020) adopts ESPnet to build an end-to-end based baseline system. In VCC2020, the objective is intra/cross lingual nonparallel VC. A cascade method of ASR+TTS is developed.
You can download converted samples here.

CTC Forced Alignment demo

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You can align speech in a WAV file using pretrained models. Go to a recipe directory and run utils/ctc_align_wav.sh as follows:

# go to recipe directory and source path of espnet tools
cd egs/wsj/asr1 && . ./path.sh
# get example wav file
mkdir -p alignment
cp ../../../test_utils/ctc_align_test.wav ./alignment
# let's generate the ctc alignment of the speech!
# the transcription of the example wav is:
# "THE SALE OF THE HOTELS IS PART OF HOLIDAY'S STRATEGY TO SELL OFF ASSETS AND CONCENTRATE ON PROPERTY MANAGEMENT"
ctc_align_wav.sh --align_dir ./alignment --models wsj.transformer.v1 ./alignment/ctc_align_test.wav "THE SALE OF THE HOTELS IS PART OF HOLIDAY'S STRATEGY TO SELL OFF ASSETS AND CONCENTRATE ON PROPERTY MANAGEMENT"

where test.wav is a WAV file to be aligned. The sampling rate must be consistent with that of data used in training.

Available pretrained models in the demo script are listed as below.

Model Notes
wsj.transformer.v1 Transformer-ASR trained on WSJ corpus

References

[1] Shinji Watanabe, Takaaki Hori, Shigeki Karita, Tomoki Hayashi, Jiro Nishitoba, Yuya Unno, Nelson Enrique Yalta Soplin, Jahn Heymann, Matthew Wiesner, Nanxin Chen, Adithya Renduchintala, and Tsubasa Ochiai, "ESPnet: End-to-End Speech Processing Toolkit," Proc. Interspeech'18, pp. 2207-2211 (2018)

[2] Suyoun Kim, Takaaki Hori, and Shinji Watanabe, "Joint CTC-attention based end-to-end speech recognition using multi-task learning," Proc. ICASSP'17, pp. 4835--4839 (2017)

[3] Shinji Watanabe, Takaaki Hori, Suyoun Kim, John R. Hershey and Tomoki Hayashi, "Hybrid CTC/Attention Architecture for End-to-End Speech Recognition," IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Signal Processing, vol. 11, no. 8, pp. 1240-1253, Dec. 2017

Citations

@inproceedings{watanabe2018espnet,
  author={Shinji Watanabe and Takaaki Hori and Shigeki Karita and Tomoki Hayashi and Jiro Nishitoba and Yuya Unno and Nelson {Enrique Yalta Soplin} and Jahn Heymann and Matthew Wiesner and Nanxin Chen and Adithya Renduchintala and Tsubasa Ochiai},
  title={ESPnet: End-to-End Speech Processing Toolkit},
  year=2018,
  booktitle={Interspeech},
  pages={2207--2211},
  doi={10.21437/Interspeech.2018-1456},
  url={http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/Interspeech.2018-1456}
}
@misc{hayashi2019espnettts,
    title={ESPnet-TTS: Unified, Reproducible, and Integratable Open Source End-to-End Text-to-Speech Toolkit},
    author={Tomoki Hayashi and Ryuichi Yamamoto and Katsuki Inoue and Takenori Yoshimura and Shinji Watanabe and Tomoki Toda and Kazuya Takeda and Yu Zhang and Xu Tan},
    year={2019},
    eprint={1910.10909},
    archivePrefix={arXiv},
    primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
@article{inaguma2020espnet,
  title={ESPnet-ST: All-in-One Speech Translation Toolkit},
  author={Inaguma, Hirofumi and Kiyono, Shun and Duh, Kevin and Karita, Shigeki and Soplin, Nelson Enrique Yalta and Hayashi, Tomoki and Watanabe, Shinji},
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.10234},
  year={2020}
}

About

End-to-End Speech Processing Toolkit

https://espnet.github.io/espnet/

License:Apache License 2.0


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