Code-switching automatic speech recognition (CS-ASR) presents unique challenges due to language confusion introduced by spontaneous intra-sentence switching and accent bias that blurs the phonetic boundaries. Although the constituent languages may be individually high-resource, the scarcity of annotated code-switching data further compounds these challenges. In this paper, we systematically analyze CS-ASR from both model-centric and data-centric perspectives. By comparing state-of-the-art algorithmic methods, including language-specific processing and auxiliary language-aware multi-task learning, we discuss their varying effectiveness across datasets with different linguistic characteristics. On the data side, we first investigate TTS as a data augmentation method. By varying the textual characteristics and speaker accents, we analyze the impact of language confusion and accent bias on CS-ASR. To further mitigate data scarcity and enhance textual diversity, we propose a prompting strategy by simplifying the equivalence constraint theory (SECT) to guide large language models (LLMs) in generating linguistically valid code-switching text. The proposed SECT outperforms existing methods in ASR performance and linguistic quality assessments, generating code-switching text that more closely resembles real-world code-switching text. When used to generate speech-text pairs via TTS, SECT proves effective in improving CS-ASR performance. Our analysis of both model- and data-centric methods underscores that effective CS-ASR requires strategies to be carefully aligned with the specific linguistic characteristics of the code-switching data.
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Hexin Liu
Haoyang Zhang
Qiquan Zhang
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Liu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68f5fcce8d54a28a75cf1d45 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2509.24310