BiRQ: Bi-Level Self-Labeling Random Quantization for Self-Supervised Speech Recognition
Jiang, Liuyuan, Cui, Xiaodong, Kingsbury, Brian, Chen, Tianyi, Chen, Lisha
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Speech is a rich signal, and labeled audio-text pairs are costly, making self-supervised learning essential for scalable representation learning. A core challenge in speech SSL is generating pseudo-labels that are both informative and efficient: strong labels, such as those used in HuBERT, improve downstream performance but rely on external encoders and multi-stage pipelines, while efficient methods like BEST-RQ achieve simplicity at the cost of weaker labels. We propose BiRQ, a bilevel SSL framework that combines the efficiency of BEST-RQ with the refinement benefits of HuBERT-style label enhancement. The key idea is to reuse part of the model itself as a pseudo-label generator: intermediate representations are discretized by a random-projection quantizer to produce enhanced labels, while anchoring labels derived directly from the raw input stabilize training and prevent collapse. Training is formulated as an efficient first-order bilevel optimization problem, solved end-to-end with differentiable Gumbel-softmax selection. This design eliminates the need for external label encoders, reduces memory cost, and enables iterative label refinement in an end-to-end fashion. BiRQ consistently improves over BEST-RQ while maintaining low complexity and computational efficiency. We validate our method on various datasets, including 960-hour LibriSpeech, 150-hour AMI meetings and 5,000-hour YODAS, demonstrating consistent gains over BEST-RQ.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Sep-22-2025
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.46)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence
- Natural Language (1.00)
- Machine Learning > Statistical Learning (0.68)
- Representation & Reasoning > Optimization (0.67)
- Speech > Speech Recognition (0.66)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence