Towards understanding ASR error correction for medical conversations

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Abstract

Domain Adaptation for Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) error correction via machine translation is a useful technique for improving out-of-domain outputs of pre-trained ASR systems to obtain optimal results for specific in-domain tasks. We use this technique on our dataset of Doctor-Patient conversations using two off-the-shelf ASR systems: Google ASR (commercial) and the ASPIRE model (open-source). We train a Sequence-to-Sequence Machine Translation model and evaluate it on seven specific UMLS Semantic types, including Pharmacological Substance, Sign or Symptom, and Diagnostic Procedure to name a few. Lastly, we breakdown, analyze and discuss the 7% overall improvement in word error rate in view of each Semantic type.

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APA

Mani, A., Palaskar, S., & Konam, S. (2020). Towards understanding ASR error correction for medical conversations. In Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (pp. 7–11). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2020.nlpmc-1.2

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