A syllable-based framework for unit selection synthesis in 13 Indian languages

HA Patil, TB Patel, NJ Shah, HB Sailor… - … held jointly with …, 2013 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
HA Patil, TB Patel, NJ Shah, HB Sailor, R Krishnan, GR Kasthuri, T Nagarajan, L Christina…
2013 International Conference Oriental COCOSDA held jointly with …, 2013ieeexplore.ieee.org
In this paper, we discuss a consortium effort on building text to speech (TTS) systems for 13
Indian languages. There are about 1652 Indian languages. A unified framework is therefore
attempted required for building TTSes for Indian languages. As Indian languages are
syllable-timed, a syllable-based framework is developed. As quality of speech synthesis is of
paramount interest, unit-selection synthesizers are built. Building TTS systems for low-
resource languages requires that the data be carefully collected an annotated as the …
In this paper, we discuss a consortium effort on building text to speech (TTS) systems for 13 Indian languages. There are about 1652 Indian languages. A unified framework is therefore attempted required for building TTSes for Indian languages. As Indian languages are syllable-timed, a syllable-based framework is developed. As quality of speech synthesis is of paramount interest, unit-selection synthesizers are built. Building TTS systems for low-resource languages requires that the data be carefully collected an annotated as the database has to be built from the scratch. Various criteria have to addressed while building the database, namely, speaker selection, pronunciation variation, optimal text selection, handling of out of vocabulary words and so on. The various characteristics of the voice that affect speech synthesis quality are first analysed. Next the design of the corpus of each of the Indian languages is tabulated. The collected data is labeled at the syllable level using a semiautomatic labeling tool. Text to speech synthesizers are built for all the 13 languages, namely, Hindi, Tamil, Marathi, Bengali, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada, Gujarati, Rajasthani, Assamese, Manipuri, Odia and Bodo using the same common framework. The TTS systems are evaluated using degradation Mean Opinion Score (DMOS) and Word Error Rate (WER). An average DMOS score of ≈3.0 and an average WER of about 20 % is observed across all the languages.
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