arXiv:2604.19797v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) for low-resource Dravidian languages like Telugu and Kannada faces significant challenges in specialized medical domains due to limited annotated data and morphological complexity. This work proposes a novel confidence-aware training framework that integrates real and synthetic speech data through a hybrid confidence mechanism combining static perceptual and acoustic similarity metrics with dynamic model entropy. Unlike direct fine-tuning approaches, the proposed methodology employs both fixed-weight and learnable-weight confidence aggregation strategies to guide sample weighting during training, enabling effective utilization of heterogeneous data sources. The framework is evaluated on Telugu and Kannada medical datasets containing both real recordings and TTS-generated synthetic speech. A 5-gram KenLM language model is applied for post-decoding correction. Results show that the hybrid confidence-aware approach with learnable weights substantially reduces recognition errors: Telugu Word Error Rate (WER) decreases from 24.3% to 15.8% (8.5% absolute improvement), while Kannada WER drops from 31.7% to 25.4% (6.3% absolute improvement), both significantly outperforming standard fine-tuning baselines. These findings confirm that combining adaptive confidence-aware training with statistical language modeling delivers superior performance for domain-specific ASR in morphologically complex Dravidian languages.
Cognitive Alignment At No Cost: Inducing Human Attention Biases For Interpretable Vision Transformers
arXiv:2604.20027v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: For state-of-the-art image understanding, Vision Transformers (ViTs) have become the standard architecture but their processing diverges substantially from human attentional


