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Few Shot Learning based Hotword Detection Engine

Project description

EfficientWord-Net

Versions : 3.6 ,3.7,3.8,3.9

Hotword detection based on few-shot learning

Home assistants require special phrases called hotwords to get activated (eg:"ok google")

EfficientWord-Net is an hotword detection engine based on few-shot learning inspired from FaceNet's Siamese Network Architecture. Works very similar to face recognition , just requires a few samples of your own custom hotword to get going. No extra training or huge datasets required!! This will allow developers to add custom hotwords to their programs without a sweat or any extra charges. Just like google assistant's hotword detector, the engine performs the best when 3-4 hotword samples are collected directly from the user This repository is an official implemenation of EfficientWord-Net as a python library from the authors.

The library is purely written with python and uses Google's Tflite implemenation for faster realtime inference.

Demo of EfficientWord-Net in Pi

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/44740048/139785995-3330d65a-cfe1-4e92-8769-ee389a122acc.mp4

Access training file

Training File to access the training file.

Datasets

Here are the links: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1f6dp72D9WxErXvaZP6KIBLv4-eKpvLZa/view?usp=sharing, https://drive.google.com/file/d/19QUTiAZvF1pFy5BeaV_rc83MeDu8yojv/view?usp=sharing

Access paper

Research Paper to access the research paper.

Python Version Requirements

This Library works between python versions: 3.6 to 3.9

Dependencies Installation

Before running the pip installation command for the library, few dependencies need to be installed manually.

tflite package cannot be listed in requirements.txt hence will be automatically installed when the package is initialized in the system.

librosa package is not required for inference only cases , however when generate_reference is called , will be automatically installed.


Package Installation

Run the following pip command

pip install EfficientWord-Net

and to import running

import eff_word_net

Demo

After installing the packages, you can run the Demo script inbuilt with library (ensure you have a working mic).

Accesss Documentation from : https://ant-brain.github.io/EfficientWord-Net/

Command to run demo

python -m eff_word_net.engine

Generating Custom Wakewords

For any new hotword, the library needs information about the hotword, this information is obtained from a file called {wakeword}_ref.json. Eg: For the wakeword 'alexa', the library would need the file called alexa_ref.json

These files can be generated with the following procedure:

One needs to collect few 4 to 10 uniquely sounding pronunciations of a given wakeword. Then put them into a seperate folder, which doesnt contain anything else.

Or one could use the following command to generate audio files for a given word, uses ibm neural tts demo api, Kindly dont over use it for our sake (lol)

python -m eff_word_net.ibm_generate

Finally run this command, it will ask for the input folder's location (containing the audio files) and the output folder (where _ref.json file will be stored).

python -m eff_word_net.generate_reference

The pathname of the generated wakeword needs to passed to the HotwordDetector detector instance.

HotwordDetector(
        hotword="hello",
        model = Resnet_50_Arc_loss(),
        reference_file = "/full/path/name/of/hello_ref.json"),
        threshold=0.9, #min confidence required to consider a trigger
        relaxation_time = 0.8 #default value ,in seconds
)

The model variable can receive an instance of Resnet_50_Arc_loss or First_Iteration_Siamese

relaxation time parameter is used to determine the min time between any 2 triggers, any potential triggers before the relaxation_time will be cancelled

The detector operates on a sliding widow approach resulting in multiple triggers for single utterance of a hotword, the relaxation_time parameter can used to control the multiple triggers, in most cases 0.8sec(default) will do


Out of the box sample hotwords

Few wakewords such as Mycroft, Google, Firefox, Alexa, Mobile, Siri the library has predefined embeddings readily available in the library installation directory, its path is readily available in the following variable

from eff_word_net import samples_loc

Try your first single hotword detection script

import os
from eff_word_net.streams import SimpleMicStream
from eff_word_net.engine import HotwordDetector

from eff_word_net.audio_processing import Resnet50_Arc_loss

from eff_word_net import samples_loc

base_model = Resnet50_Arc_loss()

mycroft_hw = HotwordDetector(
    hotword="mycroft",
    model = base_model,
    reference_file=os.path.join(samples_loc, "mycroft_ref.json"),
    threshold=0.7,
    relaxation_time=2
)

mic_stream = SimpleMicStream(
    window_length_secs=1.5,
    sliding_window_secs=0.75,
)

mic_stream.start_stream()

print("Say Mycroft ")
while True :
    frame = mic_stream.getFrame()
    result = mycroft_hw.scoreFrame(frame)
    if result==None :
        #no voice activity
        continue
    if(result["match"]):
        print("Wakeword uttered",result["confidence"])

Detecting Mulitple Hotwords from audio streams

The library provides a computation friendly way to detect multiple hotwords from a given stream, instead of running scoreFrame() of each wakeword individually

import os
from eff_word_net.streams import SimpleMicStream
from eff_word_net import samples_loc
print(samples_loc)


base_model = Resnet50_Arc_loss()

mycroft_hw = HotwordDetector(
    hotword="mycroft",
    model = base_model,
    reference_file=os.path.join(samples_loc,"mycroft_ref.json"),
    threshold=0.7,
    relaxation_time=2
)

alexa_hw = HotwordDetector(
        hotword="alexa",
        model=base_model,
        reference_file=os.path.join(samples_loc,"alexa_ref.json"),
        threshold=0.7,
        relaxation_time=2,
        #verbose=True
)


computer_hw = HotwordDetector(
    hotword="computer",
    model=base_model,
    reference_file=os.path.join(samples_loc,"computer_ref.json"),
    threshold=0.7,
    relaxation_time=2,
    #verbose=True
)

multi_hotword_detector = MultiHotwordDetector(
    [mycroft_hw, alexa_hw, computer_hw],
    model=base_model,
    continuous=True,
)

mic_stream = SimpleMicStream(window_length_secs=1.5, sliding_window_secs=0.75)
mic_stream.start_stream()

print("Say ", " / ".join([x.hotword for x in multi_hotword_detector.detector_collection]))

while True :
    frame = mic_stream.getFrame()
    result = multi_hotword_detector.findBestMatch(frame)
    if(None not in result):
        print(result[0],f",Confidence {result[1]:0.4f}")

Access documentation of the library from here : https://ant-brain.github.io/EfficientWord-Net/

Change notes from 0.2.2 to v1.0.1

New Model Addition Resnet_50_Arc_loss with huge improvements !!

Trained a new model from scratch using a modified distilled dataset from MLCommons, used Arcloss logic instead of triplet loss logic

The resultant model created is stored resnet_50_arcloss

The newer model is show casing much better resilience towards background noise and requires fewer samples for good accuracy

Minor changes in the api flow to facilitate easy addition of newer models

Newer model can handle a fixed window length of 1.5 seconds

The old model can still be accessed through first_iteration_siamese

Change notes from v0.1.1 to 0.2.2

major changes to replace complex friking logic of handling poly triggers per utterance into more simpler logic and more simpler api for programmers

Introduces breaking changes

Limitations in Current model

  • trained on single words , hence may result in bizare behaviour on using phrases like "Hey xxx"
  • audio processing window limited to 1 sec. Hence will not work effectively for longer hotwords

FAQ :

  • Hotword Perfomance is bad : if you are having some issue like this , feel to ask the same in discussions
  • Can it run on FPGAs like arduino? : No , new model Resnet_50_Arcloss is too heavy to run on arduino (Roughly 88Mb) in size, soon we will add support of pruned versions of the model so that it can become light enough to run on tiny devices, for now it should be able to run in Raspberry pi like devices

CONTRIBUTION:

  • If you have an ideas to make the project better, feel free to ping us in discussions
  • The current logmelcalc.tflite graph can convert only 1 audio frame to Log Mel Spectrogram at a time. It will be of a great help if tensorflow guru's outthere help us out with this.

TODO :

  • Add audio file handler in streams. PR's are welcome.
  • Remove librosa requirement to encourage generating reference files directly in edge devices
  • Add more detailed documentation explaining slider window concept
  • Add model finetuning support
  • Add support for sparse and finegrained pruning where the resultant models could be used for finetuning (already working on the same)

SUPPORT US:

Our hotword detector's performance is notably low when compared to Porcupine. We have thought about better NN architectures for the engine and hope to outperform Porcupine. This has been our undergrad project. Hence your support and encouragement will motivate us to develop the engine. If you loved this project recommend this to your peers, give us a 🌟 in Github and a clap 👏 in medium.

Update: Your stars encouraged us to create a new model which is far better , lets make this community grow

LICENCSE : Apache License 2.0

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