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Adding Sentence Boundaries to Conversational Speech Transcriptions using Noisily Labelled Examples. Tetsuya Nasukawa, IBM Tokyo Research Lab Diwakar Punjani, IBM India Research Lab Shourya Roy , IBM India Research Lab L V Subramaniam , IBM India Research Lab
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Adding Sentence Boundaries to Conversational Speech Transcriptions using Noisily Labelled Examples Tetsuya Nasukawa, IBM Tokyo Research Lab Diwakar Punjani, IBM India Research Lab Shourya Roy , IBM India Research Lab L V Subramaniam , IBM India Research Lab Hironori Takeuchi, IBM Tokyo Research Lab Presented by : Shourya Roy IBM Research
What are We Trying to do? • Automatically identifying sentence boundaries in noisy transcriptions of conversational data. • Transcriptions can be manual or automatic (ASR) • It can work without any manual supervision • The accuracy improves with manual supervision • Detects only periods – not comma, semicolon IBM Research
Importance – One Motivating Example from Real Life Importance of analysis of transcriptions • Huge amount of telephonic conversational data produced in various domains such as CRM, BPO • Important to analyze to improve customer satisfaction, agent productivity, market reputation • NLP techniques on transcriptions is an obvious approach • Transcriptions are noisy and does not contain any punctuation marks • POS taggers and syntactic parsers perform poorly in absence of sentence boundaries Importance of sentence boundary detection for transcriptions analysis IBM Research
Why Non Trivial • Noise in the dataset • Spontaneous nature of conversation • Variation in style of speaking • Boundary density varies from call to call • Removing the calls with very low boundary density improves the scores by approx. 10% IBM Research
Existing Solutions • SBD on conversational data – not many work • Based on Pause (Silence) Information IBM Research
Example: Manual Transcription Meta Info Names of Places Timing Speaker 64.88 67.59 A: i've i've barely been out of the country. i wouldn't {breath} 65.10 67.16 B: {lipsmack} {breath} 67.64 71.26 A: i think my most memorable trip was when i was in high school. 70.57 71.81 B: {breath} uh-huh. 71.69 74.29 A: i went to %uh ^London and ^Paris. 74.29 75.01 B: %oh that's cool. 74.82 76.80 A: and that's about as exotic as it ever got. 76.75 77.76 B: {breath} was it fun? 77.49 79.95 A: %uh other than that, i haven't been west of ^Texas 80.04 80.44 B: %hm. 81.31 83.63 B: {breath} it looks like you are a east *coaster born and raised. 84.02 86.14 A: yeah. how about yourself? where are you? 86.74 87.38 B: {breath} i'm in ^Philly 87.72 90.78 A: you're in ^Philly, i guess? i wonder if everybody here is in ^Philly? probably. {breath} 88.57 89.01 B: yeah. 90.82 94.68 B: yeah, i think so because it's a ~U ^Penn thing. they probably just did it locally. plus 94.80 96.69 B: %uh are you using an ^Omnipoint phone? 96.82 97.23 A: uh-huh IBM Research
Example : Automatic Transcription • then go to properties ok now once when you go to properties up if you scroll down there that he's having internet protocol ok you have to no i'm sorry just any scroll down that you're having a net firewall so that's no we have to check if there's a check next to it ok if it's not checked you have to get a check that ok and if if you do not so if you are calling you having a check all you have to do is i can check the net firewalls so this ok and you have to go ahead and reboot the system IBM Research
Example • then go to properties ok now once when you go to properties up if you scroll down there that he's having internet protocol ok you have to no i'm sorry just any scroll down that you're having a net firewall so that's no we have to check if there's a check next to it ok if it's not checked you have to get a check that ok and if if you do not so if you are calling you having a check all you have to do is i can check the net firewalls so this ok and you have to go ahead and reboot the system IBM Research
Summary of Proposed Technique • From (possibly imprecisely) marked sentence boundaries in conversational data identify n-grams which are more likely to occur at sentence boundaries than inside the sentence • Mark sentence boundaries before (or after) head or (tail) n-grams in test data IBM Research
Technique • Preprocessing of data • Pause filling words, repetitions, unclear words are removed • Identify frequent head and tail n-grams from training data which occur in beginning and ending of sentences • Filter n-grams which also occur significant number of times in middle of the sentences • Threshold on head/tail:middle of sentence ratio • Handle interruption and continuation across turns separately • Words indicating incomplete turn e.g. get, and IBM Research
Technique (Contd.) • In the test set mark a boundary before every head n-gram and after every tail n-gram • In the case of boundaries marked based on silence information on ASR data, add new sentence boundaries • If the turn does not end with a word from the set of words indicating incomplete turn mark a boundary at the end of the turn IBM Research
Nature of Data • Manual Transcriptions • Switchboard corpus and the Call-home corpus of transcribed phone conversations from LDC • Automatic Transcriptions • Manually put punctuations • Automatically put punctuations based on silence • ASR transcribed calls from IBM helpdesk Data Statistics IBM Research
Results Increasing Decreasing Result of punctuation insertion for helpdesk data IBM Research
Improvement in PoS Tagging PoS Tagging Accuracy on Helpdesk Data An example PoS tagging improving with sentence boundary detection Ideally ‘i’ should be pronoun and ‘yeah’ and ‘oh’ should be interjection IBM Research
Improvement in PoS Tagging (Contd.) Extracted top 10 Noun Phrases from Switchboard Data Set IBM Research
Summary • Fundamental operation to be performed to apply state-of-the-art NLP techniques on (automatic) transcriptions of conversations • We proposed a technique to train a sentence boundary detector with minimal manual supervision • It would be interesting to see how much improvement is happening in actual extraction task! IBM Research
Questions? IBM Research