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In this paper we investigate the error criteria that are optimized during the training of artificial neural networks (ANN). We compare the bounds of the squared error (SE) and the crossentropy (CE) criteria being the most popular choices in stateof-the art implementations. The evaluation is performed on automatic speech recognition (ASR) and handwriting recognition (HWR) tasks using a hybrid HMM-ANN model. We find that with randomly initialized weights, the squared error based ANN does not converge to a good local optimum. However, with a good initialization by pre-training, the word error rate of our best CE trained system could be reduced from 30.9 % to 30.5% on the ASR, and from 22.7 % to 21.9 % on the HWR task by performing a few additional “fine-tuning ” iterations with the SE criterion. Index Terms: hybrid approach, training criterion for ANN training, automatic speech recognition, handwriting recognition
Golik et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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