Difference between revisions of "Speech synthesizers"

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The history of speech synthesis date back to the 18th century when Hungarian civil servant and inventor Wolfgan von Kempelen created a machine of pipes and elbows and assorted parts of musical instruments. He achieved a sufficient imitation of the human vocal tract with the third iteration. He published a comprehensive description of the design in his book entitled The Mechanism of Human Speech, with a Description of a Speaking Machine in 1791.
 
The history of speech synthesis date back to the 18th century when Hungarian civil servant and inventor Wolfgan von Kempelen created a machine of pipes and elbows and assorted parts of musical instruments. He achieved a sufficient imitation of the human vocal tract with the third iteration. He published a comprehensive description of the design in his book entitled The Mechanism of Human Speech, with a Description of a Speaking Machine in 1791.
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The design was picked up by Sir Charles Wheatstone, a Victorian Era English inventor, who improved on the Kemplelen's design. The newly sparked interest into the research of phonetics and the Whetstone's work inspired Alexander Graham Bell to do his own research into the matter and eventually arrive at the idea of the telephone.
  
 
== Main characteristics ==
 
== Main characteristics ==

Revision as of 12:35, 18 February 2016

Speech synthesis is the methods of generating artificial speech by mechanical means or by a computer algorithm. It it used when there is a need to communicate information acoustically, and nowadays is found in text-to-speech applications (screen text reading, assistance for the visually impaired) and virtual assistants (GPS navigation, mobile assistants such as Microsoft Cortana or Apple Siri), or in any other situation where the information usually available in text has to be passed acoustically. It often comes paired with voice recognition.

These applications require speech that is intelligible and natural-sounding. Today speech synthesis systems achieve great deal of naturalness compare to a real human voice. Yet they are still perceived as non-human because minor audible glitches still remain present in the outputted utterances. It may very well be that modern speech synthesis has reached the point in the Uncanny Valley where the closeness of the artificial speech is so near perfection that humans find it unnatural.

The history of speech synthesis date back to the 18th century when Hungarian civil servant and inventor Wolfgan von Kempelen created a machine of pipes and elbows and assorted parts of musical instruments. He achieved a sufficient imitation of the human vocal tract with the third iteration. He published a comprehensive description of the design in his book entitled The Mechanism of Human Speech, with a Description of a Speaking Machine in 1791.

The design was picked up by Sir Charles Wheatstone, a Victorian Era English inventor, who improved on the Kemplelen's design. The newly sparked interest into the research of phonetics and the Whetstone's work inspired Alexander Graham Bell to do his own research into the matter and eventually arrive at the idea of the telephone.

Main characteristics

Purpose

Company & People

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Ethical & Health Issues

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Related Technologies, Projects or Scientific Research

References