English

Speech vs. Transcript: Does It Matter for Human Annotators in Speech Summarization?

Computation and Language 2024-08-15 v1 Human-Computer Interaction Sound Audio and Speech Processing

Abstract

Reference summaries for abstractive speech summarization require human annotation, which can be performed by listening to an audio recording or by reading textual transcripts of the recording. In this paper, we examine whether summaries based on annotators listening to the recordings differ from those based on annotators reading transcripts. Using existing intrinsic evaluation based on human evaluation, automatic metrics, LLM-based evaluation, and a retrieval-based reference-free method. We find that summaries are indeed different based on the source modality, and that speech-based summaries are more factually consistent and information-selective than transcript-based summaries. Meanwhile, transcript-based summaries are impacted by recognition errors in the source, and expert-written summaries are more informative and reliable. We make all the collected data and analysis code public(https://github.com/cmu-mlsp/interview_humanssum) to facilitate the reproduction of our work and advance research in this area.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2408.07277,
  title  = {Speech vs. Transcript: Does It Matter for Human Annotators in Speech Summarization?},
  author = {Roshan Sharma and Suwon Shon and Mark Lindsey and Hira Dhamyal and Rita Singh and Bhiksha Raj},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.07277},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Accepted to ACL 2024 Main Conference

R2 v1 2026-06-28T18:12:26.778Z