Transcribing lengthy multi-speaker audio sessions poses major technical challenges for IT departments. Traditional Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) systems experience a drop in accuracy after just a few minutes of recording, while Multimodal Language Models (MLLM) excel at contextual understanding but struggle with processing continuous audio.
This article explores how to combine continuous Automatic Speech Recognition for temporal precision with a Multimodal Language Model for semantic enrichment. We then detail the chunking, synchronization, and fusion processes to produce a reliable, diarized transcript, while addressing cost considerations and best practices to ensure performance and ROI.
Challenges of Automatic Speech Recognition in Long Sessions
Traditional Automatic Speech Recognition systems suffer a decline in recognition rate after just a few minutes of recording, especially with multiple speakers. They often fail to accurately segment and attribute speech to the correct participants.
Degraded Accuracy over Extended Durations
Most ASR engines are optimized for short excerpts—roughly 30 seconds to 2 minutes. Beyond that, errors in punctuation, segmentation, and lexical recognition multiply. These inaccuracies result in transcripts where industry keywords or proper names are distorted, compromising downstream analysis quality.
When audio exceeds 10 minutes without segmentation, the internal model adopts incorrect contextual assumptions, leading to confusion between technical terms and informal speech. This drift worsens with background noise and overlapping speech. IT directors then face high post-editing rates, undermining overall content production time.
Moreover, processing latency increases non-linearly: the ASR buffer struggles with a continuous stream, potentially causing delays longer than the recording itself. For an IT director, this translates into prohibitive operational costs when covering conferences, steering meetings, or extended technical interviews.
Speaker Diarization and Attribution
Diarization identifies which audio segment belongs to which speaker. Basic ASR systems sometimes include diarization modules, but their robustness declines once the speaker count exceeds three. Voice overlaps or rapid exchanges generate inaccurate segmentations.
Rough segmentation leads to blocks that are either too short or too long, making fine-grained analysis of each participant’s contribution impossible. Consequently, IT project managers must manually correct speaker intervals, adding up to 40% more post-processing time.
This issue is especially critical in regulated environments or board committees, where transcription accuracy and trace reliability are essential. AI governance plays a key role here, as mislabeling can lead to flawed decision tracking or strategic misunderstandings.
Bias, Linguistic and Environmental Variability
Pre-trained ASR models struggle with accents, technical terms, or industry-specific jargon. Open-source projects often require fine-tuning with domain-specific corpora, but this demands a significant volume of data.
Additionally, recording conditions (untreated rooms, conference microphones, VoIP calls) produce variable audio quality. The model poorly adjusts its recognition thresholds, increasing the number of “missing words” and false positives.
One example: a pharmaceutical company used ASR to transcribe its R&D meetings lasting over 45 minutes. After 15 minutes, technical term recognition fell to 65% accuracy. This scenario underscores the need for a hybrid pipeline that incorporates fine-tuning to maintain acceptable quality levels.
Advantages and Limitations of Multimodal Language Models
Multimodal Language Models offer deep contextual understanding and semantic relationships between words, enriching transcripts. However, their capacity to process continuous audio streams is limited, necessitating content segmentation into manageable chunks.
Contextual Understanding and Semantic Enrichment
Unlike ASR, MLLMs analyze the generated text to extract semantic coherence, speaker intent, and named entities. They can identify key concepts and add thematic tags, giving the raw transcript a rich, structured layer.
These models also resolve coreferences and pronouns, improving readability for end users or downstream AI applications. The outcome is a more structured, annotated version—akin to an intelligent summary.
However, this service occurs post-transcription. If the initial ASR introduces too many errors, the MLLM cannot reliably correct missing segments or misrecognized homonyms, limiting the hybrid pipeline’s effectiveness.
Sequence Length Constraints
Current MLLMs have a limited context window, often between 4,000 and 16,000 tokens. This requires dividing audio into chunks so the model can analyze content without data loss. Overlong chunks cause truncation, while overly short ones complicate contextual continuity. For more on recent model advancements, see our article on AI Trends 2026.
In practice, segments of 3–5 minutes with 5–10 seconds of overlap strike the right balance. This setting ensures cross-references between chunk boundaries are captured, though it increases the number of model requests and overall cost.
A Swiss training institute tested this approach on 60-minute lectures. By configuring 4-minute chunks with an 8-second overlap, it saw a 20% improvement in semantic coherence in the final transcript. This example highlights the importance of fine-tuning chunk parameters.
Compute Resources and Latency
MLLMs are resource-intensive, demanding significant GPU/CPU power and RAM. For a 5-minute chunk, analysis latency can reach several tens of seconds, making real-time processing challenging. IT directors must size their AI clusters accordingly.
Leveraging open-source solutions can reduce licensing costs but requires tailored GPU resource management. Implementing a job orchestrator (Kubernetes, Slurm, etc.) is also essential to ensure scalability and workload isolation.
Without such infrastructure, deploying an on-premise MLLM to regularly analyze meetings longer than 2 hours can quickly become a bottleneck. Planning, monitoring, and autoscaling are prerequisites for a robust service.
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Fusion and Synchronization for Diarized Transcripts
Combining continuous ASR and an MLLM requires a sophisticated fusion process to align temporal data with semantic enrichment. Fine synchronization ensures a coherent, diarized transcript.
Temporal Alignment of Segments
The first challenge is correlating the timestamps generated by ASR with the text passages enriched by the MLLM. Each chunk is tagged with ASR-derived start and end timestamps, preserving the audio’s linear structure.
When chunks overlap, duplicates must be resolved: typically, the segment with the higher ASR confidence score is favored for each overlapping portion. This approach reduces repeated errors from the language models.
Fine synchronization prevents perceptible misalignments in subtitles or meeting notes, which is crucial for videoconferencing or publishing accessible content.
Semantic Fusion Methods
Once blocks are temporally aligned, the pipeline integrates MLLM annotations: section summaries, entity extraction, thematic classification. These enrichments augment the raw ASR text without altering its time-based structure.
Semantic fusion relies on priority rules: the ASR transcript remains the authoritative source for exact word sequences, while the MLLM provides metadata and concise reformulations. The final assembly produces an XML or JSON document containing both time-coded transcripts and semantic annotations.
This hybrid format can power AI chatbots, internal search engines, and knowledge-management platforms, ensuring both context and lexical precision.
Conflict Resolution and Post-Processing
When the two sources diverge on the same segment, post-processing applies a combined scoring metric: ASR confidence × MLLM probability. The fragment with the highest score is selected, or a manual revision suggestion is included in a QA report.
Assisted post-editing tools often feature an interface where users compare proposed variants and approve the final version. This QA step is indispensable in regulated sectors such as finance or healthcare.
A Swiss vocational training organization implemented this hybrid pipeline and reduced manual review time by 50%, while improving diarization reliability. This example demonstrates the concrete impact of the fusion process on operational quality.
Cost Analysis and Best Practices for Managing Costs and Quality
Infrastructure and processing costs can escalate quickly if chunking, synchronization, and resource sizing aren’t optimized. The following best practices ensure a controlled ROI.
Cost Estimation and Resource Sizing
For continuous use, model transcription and AI compute hours. A standard GPU cluster for MLLMs can cost several thousand Swiss francs per month, depending on usage and hosting.
Implementing horizontal scaling—adding GPU nodes on demand—smooths costs according to activity peaks while ensuring service availability. Cloud and on-premise solutions can be mixed to capitalize on optimal pricing.
Using open-source frameworks reduces licensing fees but demands investment in internal expertise or external partners. Edana’s hybrid approach minimizes vendor lock-in while securing long-term budget control.
Optimizing Chunking and Overlap
Selecting the right chunk size and overlap rate is crucial. A 5%–10% overlap maximizes semantic continuity without excessively increasing AI calls. This tuning is often iterative, using a representative sample of your recordings.
In practice, start with 3-minute segments, then adjust based on error rates and network latency to find the optimal balance. Regularly monitoring recognition performance guides periodic parameter refinements.
Automated scripts can test multiple configurations in batch, generate quality reports, and recommend the optimal setup. This empirical approach limits overspending due to poor initial estimates.
Pre-Planning to Avoid Costly Mistakes
A pilot phase is critical: it validates the ASR and MLLM configuration on real organizational recordings. You can then measure accuracy, latency, and budget impact before large-scale deployment.
This step also identifies specific diarization requirements (speaker count, meeting types) and fine-tunes the fusion and QA processes. Inadequate planning often leads to delays or complete redesign costs.
By adopting a clear roadmap—workload management, acceptance tests, technical and economic benchmarks—IT directors secure their project and avoid budget overruns. This ensures a sustainable, modular, and business-aligned solution.
Adopt a Hybrid Approach for Optimal Audio Transcripts
Combining continuous Automatic Speech Recognition for temporal precision with a Multimodal Language Model for contextual enrichment is key to reliable, diarized long-duration transcripts. By optimizing chunking, synchronization, and fusion processes—and wisely sizing your resources—you control both costs and performance.
Our Edana experts are at your disposal to define a strategy tailored to your context, prioritizing open-source, modularity, and scalability. Whether you’re planning a pilot or a large-scale integration, we support you from audit to production to guarantee a lasting ROI.

















