DocumentCode :
2646743
Title :
Issues in text-to-speech synthesis
Author :
Macchi, Marian
Author_Institution :
Bellcore, NJ, USA
fYear :
1998
fDate :
21-23 May 1998
Firstpage :
318
Lastpage :
325
Abstract :
The ultimate goal of text-to-speech synthesis is to convert ordinary orthographic text into an acoustic signal that is indistinguishable from human speech. Originally, synthesis systems were architected around a system of rules and models that were based on research on human language and speech production and perception processes. The quality of speech produced by such systems is inherently limited by the quality of the rules and the models. Given that our knowledge of human speech processes is still incomplete, the quality of text-to-speech is far from natural-sounding. Hence, today´s interest in high quality speech for applications, in combination with advances in computer resource, has caused the focus to shift from rules and model-based methods to corpus-based methods that presumably bypass rules and models. For example, many systems now rely on large word pronunciation dictionaries instead of letter-to-phoneme rules and large prerecorded sound inventories instead of rules predicting the acoustic correlates of phonemes. Because of the need to analyze large amounts of data, this approach relies on automated techniques such as those used in automatic speech recognition
Keywords :
speech synthesis; acoustic signal; corpus-based methods; orthographic text; prerecorded sound inventories; text-to-speech synthesis; word pronunciation dictionaries; Application software; Automatic speech recognition; Dictionaries; Humans; Natural languages; Production systems; Signal synthesis; Speech analysis; Speech processing; Speech synthesis;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Intelligence and Systems, 1998. Proceedings., IEEE International Joint Symposia on
Conference_Location :
Rockville, MD
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-8548-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IJSIS.1998.685467
Filename :
685467
Link To Document :
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