86 research outputs found

    Improving Neural Vocoder Stability Using Artificial Training Data

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    A text-to-speech (TTS) converter typically comprises a prosodic model that generates acoustic parameters from linguistic features paired with a neural vocoder. With such a configuration, some feature values can be difficult for the neural vocoder to process, resulting in audio artifacts. This disclosure describes techniques to improve neural vocoder performance, e.g., reduce audio artifacts, make the vocoder more robust to unusual acoustic feature variations, generally be more forgiving of errors made by the feature generator, etc. The techniques entail the use of an auxiliary training path that is driven by synthetic training examples generated by CHiVE inference with some random sampling far enough from the mean (zero)

    The HTS-2008 System: Yet Another Evaluation of the Speaker-Adaptive HMM-based Speech Synthesis System in The 2008 Blizzard Challenge

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    For the 2008 Blizzard Challenge, we used the same speaker-adaptive approach to HMM-based speech synthesis that was used in the HTS entry to the 2007 challenge, but an improved system was built in which the multi-accented English average voice model was trained on 41 hours of speech data with high-order mel-cepstral analysis using an efficient forward-backward algorithm for the HSMM. The listener evaluation scores for the synthetic speech generated from this system was much better than in 2007: the system had the equal best naturalness on the small English data set and the equal best intelligibility on both small and large data sets for English, and had the equal best naturalness on the Mandarin data. In fact, the English system was found to be as intelligible as human speech

    Performance Evaluation of The Speaker-Independent HMM-based Speech Synthesis System "HTS-2007" for the Blizzard Challenge 2007

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    This paper describes a speaker-independent/adaptive HMM-based speech synthesis system developed for the Blizzard Challenge 2007. The new system, named HTS-2007, employs speaker adaptation (CSMAPLR+MAP), feature-space adaptive training, mixed-gender modeling, and full-covariance modeling using CSMAPLR transforms, in addition to several other techniques that have proved effective in our previous systems. Subjective evaluation results show that the new system generates significantly better quality synthetic speech than that of speaker-dependent approaches with realistic amounts of speech data, and that it bears comparison with speaker-dependent approaches even when large amounts of speech data are available

    Translatotron 3: Speech to Speech Translation with Monolingual Data

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    This paper presents Translatotron 3, a novel approach to train a direct speech-to-speech translation model from monolingual speech-text datasets only in a fully unsupervised manner. Translatotron 3 combines masked autoencoder, unsupervised embedding mapping, and back-translation to achieve this goal. Experimental results in speech-to-speech translation tasks between Spanish and English show that Translatotron 3 outperforms a baseline cascade system, reporting 18.14 BLEU points improvement on the synthesized Unpaired-Conversational dataset. In contrast to supervised approaches that necessitate real paired data, which is unavailable, or specialized modeling to replicate para-/non-linguistic information, Translatotron 3 showcases its capability to retain para-/non-linguistic such as pauses, speaking rates, and speaker identity. Audio samples can be found in our website http://google-research.github.io/lingvo-lab/translatotron
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