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Lhotse

Lhotse is a Python library aiming to make speech and audio data preparation flexible and accessible to a wider community. Alongside k2, it is a part of the next generation Kaldi speech processing library.

Tutorial presentations and materials

About

Main goals

Tutorials

We currently have the following tutorials available in examples directory:

Examples of use

Check out the following links to see how Lhotse is being put to use:

Main ideas

Like Kaldi, Lhotse provides standard data preparation recipes, but extends that with a seamless PyTorch integration through task-specific Dataset classes. The data and meta-data are represented in human-readable text manifests and exposed to the user through convenient Python classes.

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Lhotse introduces the notion of audio cuts, designed to ease the training data construction with operations such as mixing, truncation and padding that are performed on-the-fly to minimize the amount of storage required. Data augmentation and feature extraction are supported both in pre-computed mode, with highly-compressed feature matrices stored on disk, and on-the-fly mode that computes the transformations upon request. Additionally, Lhotse introduces feature-space cut mixing to make the best of both worlds.

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Installation

Lhotse supports Python version 3.7 and later.

Pip

Lhotse is available on PyPI:

pip install lhotse

To install the latest, unreleased version, do:

pip install git+https://github.com/lhotse-speech/lhotse

Development installation

For development installation, you can fork/clone the GitHub repo and install with pip:

git clone https://github.com/lhotse-speech/lhotse
cd lhotse
pip install -e '.[dev]'
pre-commit install  # installs pre-commit hooks with style checks

# Running unit tests
pytest test

# Running linter checks
pre-commit run

This is an editable installation (-e option), meaning that your changes to the source code are automatically reflected when importing lhotse (no re-install needed). The [dev] part means you're installing extra dependencies that are used to run tests, build documentation or launch jupyter notebooks.

Environment variables

Lhotse uses several environment variables to customize it's behavior. They are as follows:

Optional dependencies

Other pip packages. You can leverage optional features of Lhotse by installing the relevant supporting package:

sph2pipe. For reading older LDC SPHERE (.sph) audio files that are compressed with codecs unsupported by ffmpeg and sox, please run:

# CLI
lhotse install-sph2pipe

# Python
from lhotse.tools import install_sph2pipe
install_sph2pipe()

It will download it to ~/.lhotse/tools, compile it, and auto-register in PATH. The program should be automatically detected and used by Lhotse.

Examples

We have example recipes showing how to prepare data and load it in Python as a PyTorch Dataset. They are located in the examples directory.

A short snippet to show how Lhotse can make audio data preparation quick and easy:

from torch.utils.data import DataLoader
from lhotse import CutSet, Fbank
from lhotse.dataset import VadDataset, SimpleCutSampler
from lhotse.recipes import prepare_switchboard

# Prepare data manifests from a raw corpus distribution.
# The RecordingSet describes the metadata about audio recordings;
# the sampling rate, number of channels, duration, etc.
# The SupervisionSet describes metadata about supervision segments:
# the transcript, speaker, language, and so on.
swbd = prepare_switchboard('/export/corpora3/LDC/LDC97S62')

# CutSet is the workhorse of Lhotse, allowing for flexible data manipulation.
# We create 5-second cuts by traversing SWBD recordings in windows.
# No audio data is actually loaded into memory or stored to disk at this point.
cuts = CutSet.from_manifests(
    recordings=swbd['recordings'],
    supervisions=swbd['supervisions']
).cut_into_windows(duration=5)

# We compute the log-Mel filter energies and store them on disk;
# Then, we pad the cuts to 5 seconds to ensure all cuts are of equal length,
# as the last window in each recording might have a shorter duration.
# The padding will be performed once the features are loaded into memory.
cuts = cuts.compute_and_store_features(
    extractor=Fbank(),
    storage_path='feats',
    num_jobs=8
).pad(duration=5.0)

# Construct a Pytorch Dataset class for Voice Activity Detection task:
dataset = VadDataset()
sampler = SimpleCutSampler(cuts, max_duration=300)
dataloader = DataLoader(dataset, sampler=sampler, batch_size=None)
batch = next(iter(dataloader))

The VadDataset will yield a batch with pairs of feature and supervision tensors such as the following - the speech starts roughly at the first second (100 frames):

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