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3rd SSW 1998: Blue Mountains, Australia
- The Third ESCA/COCOSDA Workshop on Speech Synthesis, SSW 1998, Blue Mountains, Australia, November 26-29, 1998. ISCA 1998
- Daniel Hirst, Albert Rilliard, Véronique Aubergé:
Comparison of subjective evaluation and an objective evaluation metric for prosody in text-to-speech synthesis. 1-4 - Gerit P. Sonntag, Thomas Portele, Felicitas Haas:
Comparing the comprehensibility of different synthetic voices in a dual task experiment. 5-10 - Christophe d'Alessandro, et al.:
Joint evaluation of text-to-speech synthesis in French within the AUPELF ARC-B3 project. 11-16 - Nick Campbell:
Where is the information in speech? (and to what extent can it be modelled in synthesis?). 17-20 - Osamu Mizuno, Shin'ya Nakajima:
Synthetic speech/sound control language: MSCL. 21-26 - Richard Sproat, Andrew J. Hunt, Mari Ostendorf, Paul Taylor, Alan W. Black, Kevin A. Lenzo, Mike Edgington:
SABLE: A standard for TTS markup. 27-30 - Jennifer J. Venditti, Jan P. H. van Santen:
Modeling segmental durations for Japanese text-to-speech synthesis. 31-36 - Li-chiung Yang:
Contextual Effects on Syllable Duration. 37-42 - Albert Febrer, Jaume Padrell, Antonio Bonafonte:
Modeling phone duration: application to Catalan TTS. 43-46 - Jürgen Trouvain, William J. Barry, Claus Nielsen, Ove Andersen:
Implications of energy declination for speech synthesis. 47-52 - Robert I. Damper, Yannick Marchand, Martin J. Adamson, Kjell Gustafson:
Comparative evaluation of letter-to-sound conversion techniques for English text-to-speech synthesis. 53-58 - Bernd Möbius:
Word and syllable models for German text-to-speech synthesis. 59-64 - Robert I. Damper, Yannick Marchand:
Improving pronunciation by analogy for text-to-speech applications. 65-70 - George Anton Kiraz, Bernd Möbius:
Multilingual syllabification using weighted finite-state transducers. 71-76 - Alan W. Black, Kevin A. Lenzo, Vincent Pagel:
Issues in building general letter to sound rules. 77-80 - Chilin Shih, Bernd Möbius:
Contextual effects on voicing profiles of German and Mandarin consonants. 81-86 - Albert Rilliard, Véronique Aubergé:
Reiterant speech for the evaluation of natural vs. synthetic prosody. 87-92 - Cynthia Grover, Justin Fackrell, Halewijn Vereecken, Jean-Pierre Martens, Bert Van Coile:
Designing prosodic databases for automatic modelling in 6 languages. 93-98 - Frédérique Sannier, Véronique Aubergé, Rabia Belrhali:
How a French text-to-speech system can describe loanwords. 99-104 - Chilin Shih, Wentao Gu, Jan P. H. van Santen:
Efficient adaptation of TTS duration model to new speakers. 105-110 - Arthur Dirksen, Ludmila Menert:
Prosody control in fluent Dutch text-to-speech. 111-114 - Oliver Jokisch, Diane Hirschfeld, Matthias Eichner, Rüdiger Hoffmann:
Creating an individual speech rhythm: a data driven approach. 115-119 - Janet E. Cahn:
Generating pitch accent distributions that show individual and stylistic differences. 121-126 - Philippe Boula de Mareüil, Christophe d'Alessandro:
Text chunking for prosodic phrasing in French. 127-132 - Corey Miller:
Individuation of postlexical phonology for speech synthesis. 133-136 - Eric Keller, Brigitte Zellner:
Motivations for the prosodic predictive chain. 137-142 - Brigitte Zellner:
Temporal structures for fast and slow speech rate. 143-146 - Paul Taylor, Alan W. Black, Richard Caley:
The architecture of the Festival speech synthesis system. 147-152 - Thomas Portele:
JUst CONcatenation - A Corpus-based Approach and its Limits. 153-158 - Pedro M. Carvalho, Luís C. Oliveira, Isabel Trancoso, Céu Viana:
Concatenative speech synthesis for European Portuguese. 159-164 - Ove Andersen, Niels-Jørn Dyhr, Inger S. Engberg, Claus Nielsen:
Synthesising short vowels from their long counterparts in a concatenative based text-to-speech system. 165-170 - H. Timothy Bunnell, Steven R. Hoskins, Debra Yarrington:
A biphone constrained concatenation method for diphone synthesis. 171-176 - Nick Campbell:
Foreign Language Speech System. 177-180 - Ken Fujisawa, Nick Campbell:
Prosody-based unit selection for Japanese speech synthesis. 181-184 - Mark C. Beutnagel, Alistair Conkie, Ann K. Syrdal:
Diphone synthesis using unit selection. 185-190 - Wen Ding, Ken Fujisawa, Nick Campbell:
Improving speech synthesis of CHATR using a perceptual discontinuity function and constraints of prosodic modification. 191-194 - Michael W. Macon, Andrew Cronk, Johan Wouters:
Generalization and discrimination in tree-structured unit selection. 195-200 - Andrew P. Breen, Peter Jackson:
Non-uniform unit selection and the similarity metric within BT's Laureate TTS system. 201-206 - Doroteo Torre Toledano, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Crespo, José Gregorio Escalada Sardina:
Trying to mimic human segmentation of speech using HMM and fuzzy logic post-correction rules. 207-212 - Agaath M. C. Sluijter, Ellen Bosgoed, Joop Kerkhoff, E. J. Meier, Toni C. M. Rietveld, Angelien Sanderman, Marc Swerts, Jacques M. B. Terken:
Evaluation of speech synthesis systems for Dutch in telecommunication applications. 213-218 - Sebastian Heid, Sarah Hawkins:
PROCSY: A hybrid approach to high-quality formant synthesis using HLSyn. 219-224 - Alexander Kain, Michael W. Macon:
Personalizing a speech synthesizer by voice adaptation. 225-230 - Mike Plumpe, Scott Meredith:
Which is more important in a concatenative text to speech system - pitch, duration, or spectral discontinuity? 231-236 - Carlos Silva, Samir Chennoukh:
Estimation of articulatory parameter trajectory from speech acoustic dynamics. 237-242 - Laure Charonnat, G. Ó Néill, Guy Mercier:
An Irish speech synthesiser. 243-248 - Pierre Badin, Gérard Bailly, Monica Raybaudi, Christoph Segebarth:
A three-dimensional linear articulatory model based on MRI data. 249-254 - Keiichi Funaki, Yoshikazu Miyanaga, Koji Tochinai:
On subband analysis based on glottal-ARMAX speech model. 255-260 - Yannis Stylianou:
Concatenative speech synthesis using a harmonic plus noise model. 261-266 - Yannis Stylianou:
Removing phase mismatches in concatenative speech synthesis. 267-272 - Masatsune Tamura, Takashi Masuko, Keiichi Tokuda, Takao Kobayashi:
Speaker adaptation for HMM-based speech synthesis system using MLLR. 273-276 - Christophe d'Alessandro, Boris Doval:
Experiments in voice quality modification of natural speech signals: the spectral approach. 277-282 - Martin Holzapfel, Rüdiger Hoffmann, Harald Höge:
A wavelet-domain PSOLA approach. 283-286 - Jialin Zhong, Joseph Olive:
Cloning synthetic talking heads. 287-292 - Jan P. H. van Santen, Bernd Möbius, Jennifer J. Venditti, Chilin Shih:
Description of the Bell Labs Intonation System. 293-298 - Hiroya Fujisaki, Sumio Ohno, Changfu Wang:
A command-response model for F0 contour generation in multilingual speech synthesis. 299-304 - Ann K. Syrdal, Gregor Möhler, Kurt E. Dusterhoff, Alistair Conkie, Alan W. Black:
Three methods of intonation modeling. 305-310 - Gregor Möhler, Alistair Conkie:
Parametric modeling of intonation using vector quantization. 311-316 - Jennifer J. Venditti, Kazuaki Maeda, Jan P. H. van Santen:
Modeling Japanese boundary pitch movements for speech synthesis. 317-322 - Fabrice Malfrère, Thierry Dutoit, Piet Mertens:
Automatic prosody generation using suprasegmental unit selection. 323-328 - Jan P. H. van Santen, Louis C. W. Pols, Masanobu Abe, Dan Kahn, Eric Keller, Julie Vonwiller:
Report on the Third ESCA TTS Workshop evaluation procedure. 329-332
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