70
3

Advancing Test-Time Adaptation for Acoustic Foundation Models in Open-World Shifts

Abstract

Test-Time Adaptation (TTA) is a critical paradigm for tackling distribution shifts during inference, especially in visual recognition tasks. However, while acoustic models face similar challenges due to distribution shifts in test-time speech, TTA techniques specifically designed for acoustic modeling in the context of open-world data shifts remain scarce. This gap is further exacerbated when considering the unique characteristics of acoustic foundation models: 1) they are primarily built on transformer architectures with layer normalization and 2) they deal with test-time speech data of varying lengths in a non-stationary manner. These aspects make the direct application of vision-focused TTA methods, which are mostly reliant on batch normalization and assume independent samples, infeasible. In this paper, we delve into TTA for pre-trained acoustic models facing open-world data shifts. We find that noisy, high-entropy speech frames, often non-silent, carry key semantic content. Traditional TTA methods might inadvertently filter out this information using potentially flawed heuristics. In response, we introduce a heuristic-free, learning-based adaptation enriched by confidence enhancement. Noting that speech signals' short-term consistency, we also apply consistency regularization during test-time optimization. Our experiments on synthetic and real-world datasets affirm our method's superiority over existing baselines.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper

We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our website, to show you personalized content and targeted ads, to analyze our website traffic, and to understand where our visitors are coming from. See our policy.