TY - JOUR
T1 - Community-Supported Shared Infrastructure in Support of Speech Accessibility
AU - Hasegawa-Johnson, Mark
AU - Zheng, Xiuwen
AU - Kim, Heejin
AU - Mendes, Clarion
AU - Dickinson, Meg
AU - Hege, Erik
AU - Zwilling, Chris
AU - Channell, Marie Moore
AU - Mattie, Laura
AU - Hodges, Heather
AU - Ramig, Lorraine
AU - Bellard, Mary
AU - Shebanek, Mike
AU - Sarι, Leda
AU - Kalgaonkar, Kaustubh
AU - Frerichs, David
AU - Bigham, Jeffrey P.
AU - Findlater, Leah
AU - Lea, Colin
AU - Herrlinger, Sarah
AU - Korn, Peter
AU - Abou-Zahra, Shadi
AU - Heywood, Rus
AU - Tomanek, Katrin
AU - Macdonald, Bob
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Purpose: The Speech Accessibility Project (SAP) intends to facilitate research and development in automatic speech recognition (ASR) and other machine learning tasks for people with speech disabilities. The purpose of this article is to introduce this project as a resource for researchers, including baseline analysis of the first released data package. Method: The project aims to facilitate ASR research by collecting, curating, and distributing transcribed U.S. English speech from people with speech and/or language disabilities. Participants record speech from their place of residence by connecting their personal computer, cell phone, and assistive devices, if needed, to the SAP web portal. All samples are manually transcribed, and 30 per participant are annotated using differential diagnostic pattern dimensions. For purposes of ASR experiments, the participants have been randomly assigned to a training set, a development set for controlled testing of a trained ASR, and a test set to evaluate ASR error rate. Results: The SAP 2023-10-05 Data Package contains the speech of 211 people with dysarthria as a correlate of Parkinson’s disease, and the associated test set contains 42 additional speakers. A baseline ASR, with a word error rate of 3.4% for typical speakers, transcribes test speech with a word error rate of 36.3%. Fine-tuning reduces the word error rate to 23.7%. Conclusions: Preliminary findings suggest that a large corpus of dysarthric and dysphonic speech has the potential to significantly improve speech technology for people with disabilities. By providing these data to researchers, the SAP intends to significantly accelerate research into accessible speech technology.
AB - Purpose: The Speech Accessibility Project (SAP) intends to facilitate research and development in automatic speech recognition (ASR) and other machine learning tasks for people with speech disabilities. The purpose of this article is to introduce this project as a resource for researchers, including baseline analysis of the first released data package. Method: The project aims to facilitate ASR research by collecting, curating, and distributing transcribed U.S. English speech from people with speech and/or language disabilities. Participants record speech from their place of residence by connecting their personal computer, cell phone, and assistive devices, if needed, to the SAP web portal. All samples are manually transcribed, and 30 per participant are annotated using differential diagnostic pattern dimensions. For purposes of ASR experiments, the participants have been randomly assigned to a training set, a development set for controlled testing of a trained ASR, and a test set to evaluate ASR error rate. Results: The SAP 2023-10-05 Data Package contains the speech of 211 people with dysarthria as a correlate of Parkinson’s disease, and the associated test set contains 42 additional speakers. A baseline ASR, with a word error rate of 3.4% for typical speakers, transcribes test speech with a word error rate of 36.3%. Fine-tuning reduces the word error rate to 23.7%. Conclusions: Preliminary findings suggest that a large corpus of dysarthric and dysphonic speech has the potential to significantly improve speech technology for people with disabilities. By providing these data to researchers, the SAP intends to significantly accelerate research into accessible speech technology.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85208772657&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1044/2024_JSLHR-24-00122
DO - 10.1044/2024_JSLHR-24-00122
M3 - Article
C2 - 39325951
AN - SCOPUS:85208772657
SN - 1092-4388
VL - 67
SP - 4162
EP - 4175
JO - Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
JF - Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
IS - 11
ER -