AlloVera: A Multilingual Allophone Database

Abstract

We introduce a new resource, AlloVera, which provides mappings from 218 allophones to phonemes for 14 languages. Phonemes are contrastive phonological units, and allophones are their various concrete realizations, which are predictable from phonological context. While phonemic representations are language specific, phonetic representations (stated in terms of (allo)phones) are much closer to a universal (language-independent) transcription. AlloVera allows the training of speech recognition models that output phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), regardless of the input language. We show that a universal″ allophone model, Allosaurus, built with AlloVera, outperforms universal″ phonemic models and language-specific models on a speech-transcription task. We explore the implications of this technology (and related technologies) for the documentation of endangered and minority languages. We further explore other applications for which AlloVera will be suitable as it grows, including phonological typology.

Publication
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Antonios Anastasopoulos
Antonios Anastasopoulos
Assistant Professor

I work on multilingual models, machine translation, speech recognition, and NLP for under-served languages.

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