Delayed Fusion: Integrating Large Language Models into First-Pass Decoding in End-to-end Speech Recognition
AuthorsTakaaki Hori, Martin Kocour, Adnan Haider, Erik McDermott, Xiaodan Zhuang
Delayed Fusion: Integrating Large Language Models into First-Pass Decoding in End-to-end Speech Recognition
AuthorsTakaaki Hori, Martin Kocour, Adnan Haider, Erik McDermott, Xiaodan Zhuang
This paper presents an efficient decoding approach for end-to-end automatic speech recognition (E2E-ASR) with large language models (LLMs). Although shallow fusion is the most common approach to incorporate language models into E2E-ASR decoding, we face two practical problems with LLMs. (1) LLM inference is computationally costly. (2) There may be a vocabulary mismatch between the ASR model and the LLM. To resolve this mismatch, we need to retrain the ASR model and/or the LLM, which is at best time-consuming and in many cases not feasible. We propose “delayed fusion,” which applies LLM scores to ASR hypotheses with a delay during decoding and enables easier use of pre-trained LLMs in ASR tasks. This method can reduce not only the number of hypotheses scored by the LLM but also the number of LLM inference calls. It also allows re-tokenizion of ASR hypotheses during decoding if ASR and LLM employ different tokenizations. We demonstrate that delayed fusion provides improved decoding speed and accuracy compared to shallow fusion and N-best rescoring using the LibriHeavy ASR corpus and three public LLMs, OpenLLaMA 3B & 7B and Mistral 7B.
Revisiting ASR Error Correction with Specialized Models
July 6, 2026research area Methods and Algorithms, research area Speech and Natural Language Processing
Language models play a central role in automatic speech recognition (ASR), yet most methods rely on text-only models unaware of ASR error patterns. Recently, large language models (LLMs) have been applied to ASR correction, but introduce latency and hallucination concerns. We revisit ASR error correction with compact seq2seq models, trained on ASR errors from real and synthetic audio. To scale training, we construct synthetic corpora via cascaded…
Acoustic Model Fusion for End-to-end Speech Recognition
January 29, 2024research area Speech and Natural Language Processingconference ASRU
Recent advances in deep learning and automatic speech recognition (ASR) have enabled the end-to-end (E2E) ASR system and boosted its accuracy to a new level. The E2E systems implicitly model all conventional ASR components, such as the acoustic model (AM) and the language model (LM), in a single network trained on audio-text pairs. Despite this simpler system architecture, fusing a separate LM, trained exclusively on text corpora, into the E2E…