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Shucong Zhang

Shucong Zhang contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Streaming Speech-to-Text Translation with a SpeechLLM

Normally, a system that translates speech into text consists of separate modules for speech recognition and text-to-text translation. Combining those tasks into a SpeechLLM promises to exploit paralinguistic information in the speech and to reduce cascaded errors. But existing SpeechLLM systems are slow since they do not work in a real streaming fashion: they wait for a complete utterance of audio before outputting a translation, or output tokens at fixed intervals, which is not suitable for real applications. This work proposes an LLM-based architecture for real streaming speech-to-text translation. The LLM learns not just to emit output tokens, but also to decide whether it has seen enough audio to do so. The system is trained using automatic alignments of the input speech and the output text. In experiments on different language pairs, the system achieves a translation quality close to the non-streaming baseline, but with a latency of only 1-2 seconds.

preprint2022arXiv

Transformer-based Streaming ASR with Cumulative Attention

In this paper, we propose an online attention mechanism, known as cumulative attention (CA), for streaming Transformer-based automatic speech recognition (ASR). Inspired by monotonic chunkwise attention (MoChA) and head-synchronous decoder-end adaptive computation steps (HS-DACS) algorithms, CA triggers the ASR outputs based on the acoustic information accumulated at each encoding timestep, where the decisions are made using a trainable device, referred to as halting selector. In CA, all the attention heads of the same decoder layer are synchronised to have a unified halting position. This feature effectively alleviates the problem caused by the distinct behaviour of individual heads, which may otherwise give rise to severe latency issues as encountered by MoChA. The ASR experiments conducted on AIShell-1 and Librispeech datasets demonstrate that the proposed CA-based Transformer system can achieve on par or better performance with significant reduction in latency during inference, when compared to other streaming Transformer systems in literature.

preprint2021arXiv

Train your classifier first: Cascade Neural Networks Training from upper layers to lower layers

Although the lower layers of a deep neural network learn features which are transferable across datasets, these layers are not transferable within the same dataset. That is, in general, freezing the trained feature extractor (the lower layers) and retraining the classifier (the upper layers) on the same dataset leads to worse performance. In this paper, for the first time, we show that the frozen classifier is transferable within the same dataset. We develop a novel top-down training method which can be viewed as an algorithm for searching for high-quality classifiers. We tested this method on automatic speech recognition (ASR) tasks and language modelling tasks. The proposed method consistently improves recurrent neural network ASR models on Wall Street Journal, self-attention ASR models on Switchboard, and AWD-LSTM language models on WikiText-2.

preprint2020arXiv

When Can Self-Attention Be Replaced by Feed Forward Layers?

Recently, self-attention models such as Transformers have given competitive results compared to recurrent neural network systems in speech recognition. The key factor for the outstanding performance of self-attention models is their ability to capture temporal relationships without being limited by the distance between two related events. However, we note that the range of the learned context progressively increases from the lower to upper self-attention layers, whilst acoustic events often happen within short time spans in a left-to-right order. This leads to a question: for speech recognition, is a global view of the entire sequence still important for the upper self-attention layers in the encoder of Transformers? To investigate this, we replace these self-attention layers with feed forward layers. In our speech recognition experiments (Wall Street Journal and Switchboard), we indeed observe an interesting result: replacing the upper self-attention layers in the encoder with feed forward layers leads to no performance drop, and even minor gains. Our experiments offer insights to how self-attention layers process the speech signal, leading to the conclusion that the lower self-attention layers of the encoder encode a sufficiently wide range of inputs, hence learning further contextual information in the upper layers is unnecessary.