WavTokenizer: SOTA Discrete Codec Models With Forty Tokens Per Second for Audio Language Modeling
ππ with WavTokenizer, you can represent speech, music, and audio with only 40 tokens per second!
ππ with WavTokenizer, You can get strong reconstruction results.
ππ WavTokenizer owns rich semantic information and is build for audio language models such as GPT4-o.
π₯ News
- 2024.08: We release WavTokenizer on arxiv.
Installation
To use WavTokenizer, install it using:
conda create -n wavtokenizer python=3.9
conda activate wavtokenizer
pip install -r requirements.txt
Infer
Part1: Reconstruct audio from raw wav
from encoder.utils import convert_audio
import torchaudio
import torch
from decoder.pretrained import WavTokenizer
device=torch.device('cpu')
config_path = "./configs/xxx.yaml"
model_path = "./xxx.ckpt"
audio_outpath = "xxx"
wavtokenizer = WavTokenizer.from_pretrained0802(config_path, model_path)
wavtokenizer = wavtokenizer.to(device)
wav, sr = torchaudio.load(audio_path)
wav = convert_audio(wav, sr, 24000, 1)
bandwidth_id = torch.tensor([0])
wav=wav.to(device)
features,discrete_code= wavtokenizer.encode_infer(wav, bandwidth_id=bandwidth_id)
audio_out = wavtokenizer.decode(features, bandwidth_id=bandwidth_id)
torchaudio.save(audio_outpath, audio_out, sample_rate=24000, encoding='PCM_S', bits_per_sample=16)
Part2: Generating discrete codecs
from encoder.utils import convert_audio
import torchaudio
import torch
from decoder.pretrained import WavTokenizer
device=torch.device('cpu')
config_path = "./configs/xxx.yaml"
model_path = "./xxx.ckpt"
wavtokenizer = WavTokenizer.from_pretrained0802(config_path, model_path)
wavtokenizer = wavtokenizer.to(device)
wav, sr = torchaudio.load(audio_path)
wav = convert_audio(wav, sr, 24000, 1)
bandwidth_id = torch.tensor([0])
wav=wav.to(device)
_,discrete_code= wavtokenizer.encode_infer(wav, bandwidth_id=bandwidth_id)
print(discrete_code)
Part3: Audio reconstruction through codecs
# audio_tokens [n_q,1,t]/[n_q,t]
features = wavtokenizer.codes_to_features(audio_tokens)
bandwidth_id = torch.tensor([0])
audio_out = wavtokenizer.decode(features, bandwidth_id=bandwidth_id)
Available models
π€ links to the Huggingface model hub.
Model name | HuggingFace | Corpus | Token/s | Domain | Open-Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WavTokenizer-small-600-24k-4096 | π€ | LibriTTS | 40 | Speech | β |
WavTokenizer-small-320-24k-4096 | π€ | LibriTTS | 75 | Speech | β |
WavTokenizer-medium-600-24k-4096 | π€ | 10000 Hours | 40 | Speech, Audio, Music | Coming Soon |
WavTokenizer-medium-320-24k-4096 | π€ | 10000 Hours | 75 | Speech, Audio, Music | Coming Soon |
WavTokenizer-large-600-24k-4096 | π€ | 80000 Hours | 40 | Speech, Audio, Music | Coming Soon |
WavTokenizer-large-320-24k-4096 | π€ | 80000 Hours | 75 | Speech, Audio, Music | Coming Soon |
Training
Step1: Prepare train dataset
# Process the data into a form similar to ./data/demo.txt
Step2: Modifying configuration files
# ./configs/xxx.yaml
# Modify the values of parameters such as batch_size, filelist_path, save_dir, device
Step3: Start training process
Refer to Pytorch Lightning documentation for details about customizing the training pipeline.
cd ./WavTokenizer
python train.py fit --config ./configs/xxx.yaml
Citation
If this code contributes to your research, please cite our work, Language-Codec and WavTokenizer:
@article{ji2024wavtokenizer,
title={WavTokenizer: an Efficient Acoustic Discrete Codec Tokenizer for Audio Language Modeling},
author={Ji, Shengpeng and Jiang, Ziyue and Cheng, Xize and Chen, Yifu and Fang, Minghui and Zuo, Jialong and Yang, Qian and Li, Ruiqi and Zhang, Ziang and Yang, Xiaoda and others},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2408.16532},
year={2024}
}
@article{ji2024language,
title={Language-codec: Reducing the gaps between discrete codec representation and speech language models},
author={Ji, Shengpeng and Fang, Minghui and Jiang, Ziyue and Huang, Rongjie and Zuo, Jialung and Wang, Shulei and Zhao, Zhou},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.12208},
year={2024}
}