Title :
Speech production of an advanced talking robot based on human acoustic theory
Author :
Nishikawa, Kazufumi ; Takanobu, Hideaki ; Mochida, Takemi ; Honda, Masaaki ; Takanishi, Atsuo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Waseda Univ., Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
April 26-May 1, 2004
Abstract :
This paper describes the mechanisms and the speech production of a new advanced talking robot WT-3 (Waseda Talker-No.3) that improves on WT-2 (Waseda Talker-No.2) and is based on human acoustic theory for the reproduction of human speech. WT-3 consists of 1-DOF lungs and 3-DOF vocal cords and articulators (the 7-DOF tongue, 5-DOF lips, 1-DOF teeth, nasal cavity and 1-DOF soft palate), and can reproduce human-like articulatory motion; the total DOF is 18. The oral cavity is designed based on the MRI images of the human sagittal plane, although the cross section of the vocal tract is rectangular in shape except for the mouth. The width of the vocal tract is 30 [mm]. The average length of the vocal tract is approximately 175 [mm] and the same as that of a human´s. Compared to the previous robots, WT-3 can produce vowels more clearly, and produce stops, fricatives and nasal sounds with the new flexible mechanisms that function as the human vocal tract area and the other mechanisms. WT-3 can mechanically reproduce human speech.
Keywords :
intelligent robots; magnetic resonance imaging; sound reproduction; speech; speech processing; speech synthesis; MRI images; Waseda Talker-No.3 robot; advanced talking robot; five DOF lips; fricatives; human acoustic theory; human like articulatory motion; human speech reproduction; human vocal tract; nasal cavity; nasal sounds; one DOF lungs; one DOF soft palate; one DOF teeth; oral cavity; seven DOF tongue; speech production; three DOF vocal cords; vowels; Humans; Lips; Lungs; Magnetic resonance imaging; Mouth; Robots; Shape; Speech; Teeth; Tongue;
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation, 2004. Proceedings. ICRA '04. 2004 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8232-3
DOI :
10.1109/ROBOT.2004.1308749