Abstract
One challenging problem of robust automatic speech recognition (ASR) is how to measure the goodness of a speech enhancement algorithm (SEA) without calculating the word error rate (WER) due to the high costs of manual transcriptions, language modeling and decoding process. Traditional measures like PESQ and STOI for evaluating the speech quality and intelligibility were verified to have relatively low correlations with WER. In this study, a novel acoustics-guided evaluation (AGE) measure is proposed for estimating performance of SEAs for robust ASR. AGE consists of three consecutive steps, namely the low-level representations via the feature extraction, high-level representations via the nonlinear mapping with the acoustic model (AM), and the final AGE calculation between the representations of clean speech and degraded speech. Specifically, state posterior probabilities from neural network based AM are adopted for the high-level representations and the cross-entropy criterion is used