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inference: false |
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![encodec image](https://github.com/facebookresearch/encodec/raw/2d29d9353c2ff0ab1aeadc6a3d439854ee77da3e/architecture.png) |
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# Model Card for EnCodec |
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This model card provides details and information about EnCodec, a state-of-the-art real-time audio codec developed by Meta AI. |
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## Model Details |
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### Model Description |
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EnCodec is a high-fidelity audio codec leveraging neural networks. It introduces a streaming encoder-decoder architecture with quantized latent space, trained in an end-to-end fashion. |
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The model simplifies and speeds up training using a single multiscale spectrogram adversary that efficiently reduces artifacts and produces high-quality samples. |
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It also includes a novel loss balancer mechanism that stabilizes training by decoupling the choice of hyperparameters from the typical scale of the loss. |
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Additionally, lightweight Transformer models are used to further compress the obtained representation while maintaining real-time performance. |
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- **Developed by:** Meta AI |
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- **Model type:** Audio Codec |
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### Model Sources |
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- **Repository:** [GitHub Repository](https://github.com/facebookresearch/encodec) |
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- **Paper:** [EnCodec: End-to-End Neural Audio Codec](https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.13438) |
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## Uses |
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<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. --> |
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### Direct Use |
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<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. --> |
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EnCodec can be used directly as an audio codec for real-time compression and decompression of audio signals. |
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It provides high-quality audio compression and efficient decoding. The model was trained on various bandwiths, which can be specified when encoding (compressing) and decoding (decompressing). |
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Two different setup exist for EnCodec: |
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- Non-streamable: the input audio is split into chunks of 1 seconds, with an overlap of 10 ms, which are then encoded. |
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- Streamable: weight normalizationis used on the convolution layers, and the input is not split into chunks but rather padded on the left. |
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### Downstream Use |
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EnCodec can be fine-tuned for specific audio tasks or integrated into larger audio processing pipelines for applications such as speech generation, |
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music generation, or text to speech tasks. |
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<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app --> |
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[More Information Needed] |
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## How to Get Started with the Model |
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Use the following code to get started with the EnCodec model using a dummy example from the LibriSpeech dataset (~9MB). First, install the required Python packages: |
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``` |
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pip install --upgrade pip |
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pip install --upgrade datasets[audio] |
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pip install git+https://github.com/huggingface/transformers.git@main |
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``` |
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Then load an audio sample, and run a forward pass of the model: |
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```python |
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from datasets import load_dataset, Audio |
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from transformers import EncodecModel, AutoProcessor |
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# load a demonstration datasets |
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librispeech_dummy = load_dataset("hf-internal-testing/librispeech_asr_dummy", "clean", split="validation") |
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# load the model + processor (for pre-processing the audio) |
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model = EncodecModel.from_pretrained("facebook/encodec_24khz") |
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processor = AutoProcessor.from_pretrained("facebook/encodec_24khz") |
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# cast the audio data to the correct sampling rate for the model |
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librispeech_dummy = librispeech_dummy.cast_column("audio", Audio(sampling_rate=processor.sampling_rate)) |
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audio_sample = librispeech_dummy[0]["audio"]["array"] |
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# pre-process the inputs |
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inputs = processor(raw_audio=audio_sample, sampling_rate=processor.sampling_rate, return_tensors="pt") |
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# explicitly encode then decode the audio inputs |
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encoder_outputs = model.encode(inputs["input_values"], inputs["padding_mask"]) |
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audio_values = model.decode(encoder_outputs.audio_codes, encoder_outputs.audio_scales, inputs["padding_mask"])[0] |
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# or the equivalent with a forward pass |
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audio_values = model(inputs["input_values"], inputs["padding_mask"]).audio_values |
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``` |
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## Training Details |
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The model was trained for 300 epochs, with one epoch being 2,000 updates with the Adam optimizer with a batch size of 64 examples of 1 second each, a learning rate of 3 · 10−4 |
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, β1 = 0.5, and β2 = 0.9. All the models are traind using 8 A100 GPUs. |
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### Training Data |
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<!-- This should link to a Data Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. --> |
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- For speech: |
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- DNS Challenge 4 |
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- [Common Voice](https://huggingface.co/datasets/common_voice) |
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- For general audio: |
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- [AudioSet](https://huggingface.co/datasets/Fhrozen/AudioSet2K22) |
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- [FSD50K](https://huggingface.co/datasets/Fhrozen/FSD50k) |
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- For music: |
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- [Jamendo dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/rkstgr/mtg-jamendo) |
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They used four different training strategies to sample for these datasets: |
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- (s1) sample a single source from Jamendo with probability 0.32; |
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- (s2) sample a single source from the other datasets with the same probability; |
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- (s3) mix two sources from all datasets with a probability of 0.24; |
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- (s4) mix three sources from all datasets except music with a probability of 0.12. |
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The audio is normalized by file and a random gain between -10 and 6 dB id applied. |
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## Evaluation |
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. --> |
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### Subjectif metric for restoration: |
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This models was evalutated using the MUSHRA protocol (Series, 2014), using both a hidden reference and a low anchor. Annotators were recruited using a |
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crowd-sourcing platform, in which they were asked to rate the perceptual quality of the provided samples in |
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a range between 1 to 100. They randomly select 50 samples of 5 seconds from each category of the the test set |
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and force at least 10 annotations per samples. To filter noisy annotations and outliers we remove annotators |
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who rate the reference recordings less then 90 in at least 20% of the cases, or rate the low-anchor recording |
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above 80 more than 50% of the time. |
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### Objective metric for restoration: |
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The ViSQOL()ink) metric was used together with the Scale-Invariant Signal-to-Noise Ration (SI-SNR) (Luo & Mesgarani, 2019; |
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Nachmani et al., 2020; Chazan et al., 2021). |
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### Results |
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The results of the evaluation demonstrate the superiority of EnCodec compared to the baselines across different bandwidths (1.5, 3, 6, and 12 kbps). |
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When comparing EnCodec with the baselines at the same bandwidth, EnCodec consistently outperforms them in terms of MUSHRA score. |
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Notably, EnCodec achieves better performance, on average, at 3 kbps compared to Lyra-v2 at 6 kbps and Opus at 12 kbps. |
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Additionally, by incorporating the language model over the codes, it is possible to achieve a bandwidth reduction of approximately 25-40%. |
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For example, the bandwidth of the 3 kbps model can be reduced to 1.9 kbps. |
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#### Summary |
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EnCodec is a state-of-the-art real-time neural audio compression model that excels in producing high-fidelity audio samples at various sample rates and bandwidths. |
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The model's performance was evaluated across different settings, ranging from 24kHz monophonic at 1.5 kbps to 48kHz stereophonic, showcasing both subjective and |
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objective results. Notably, EnCodec incorporates a novel spectrogram-only adversarial loss, effectively reducing artifacts and enhancing sample quality. |
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Training stability and interpretability were further enhanced through the introduction of a gradient balancer for the loss weights. |
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Additionally, the study demonstrated that a compact Transformer model can be employed to achieve an additional bandwidth reduction of up to 40% without compromising |
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quality, particularly in applications where low latency is not critical (e.g., music streaming). |
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## Citation |
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<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. --> |
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**BibTeX:** |
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``` |
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@misc{défossez2022high, |
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title={High Fidelity Neural Audio Compression}, |
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author={Alexandre Défossez and Jade Copet and Gabriel Synnaeve and Yossi Adi}, |
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year={2022}, |
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eprint={2210.13438}, |
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archivePrefix={arXiv}, |
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primaryClass={eess.AS} |
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} |
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``` |
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