The development of synthetic child speech in three South African languages.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q1 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Camryn Terblanche, Tyler T Schnoor, Michal Harty, Benjamin V Tucker
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It is well-known that children with expressive communication difficulties have the right to communicate, but they should also have the right to do so in whichever language they choose, with a voice that closely matches their age, gender, and dialect. This study aimed to develop naturalistic synthetic child speech, matching the vocal identity of three children with expressive communication difficulties, using Tacotron 2, for three under-resourced South African languages, namely South African English (SAE), Afrikaans, and isiXhosa. Due to the scarcity of child speech corpora, 2 hours of child speech data per child was collected from three 11- to 12-year-old children. Two adult models were used to "warm start" the child speech synthesis. To determine the naturalness of the synthetic voices, 124 listeners participated in a mean opinion score survey (Likert Score) and optionally gave qualitative feedback. Despite limited training data used in this study, we successfully developed a synthesized child voice of adequate quality in each language. This study highlights that with recent technological advancements, it is possible to develop synthetic child speech that matches the vocal identity of a child with expressive communication difficulties in different under-resourced languages.

南非三种语言中儿童合成语音的发展。
众所周知,有表达交流障碍的儿童有权进行交流,但他们也应该有权用自己选择的语言进行交流,并使用与他们的年龄、性别和方言相匹配的声音。本研究旨在使用 Tacotron 2,针对南非三种资源匮乏的语言,即南非英语(SAE)、南非荷兰语(Afrikaans)和伊西科萨语(isiXhosa),开发与三名表达性交流障碍儿童的声音特征相匹配的自然合成儿童语音。由于儿童语音库稀缺,我们从三名 11 至 12 岁的儿童身上收集了每人 2 小时的儿童语音数据。两个成人模型用于儿童语音合成的 "热启动"。为了确定合成语音的自然程度,124 名听众参与了平均意见分数调查(李克特评分),并提供了定性反馈。尽管本研究中使用的训练数据有限,但我们还是成功地开发出了每种语言中具有适当质量的儿童合成语音。这项研究表明,随着最新技术的发展,我们有可能开发出符合有表达交流障碍的儿童的声音特征的合成儿童语音,使用不同的资源不足的语言。
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来源期刊
Augmentative and Alternative Communication
Augmentative and Alternative Communication AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
15.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: As the official journal of the International Society for Augmentative and Alternative Communication (ISAAC), Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) publishes scientific articles related to the field of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) that report research concerning assessment, treatment, rehabilitation, and education of people who use or have the potential to use AAC systems; or that discuss theory, technology, and systems development relevant to AAC. The broad range of topic included in the Journal reflects the development of this field internationally. Manuscripts submitted to AAC should fall within one of the following categories, AND MUST COMPLY with associated page maximums listed on page 3 of the Manuscript Preparation Guide. Research articles (full peer review), These manuscripts report the results of original empirical research, including studies using qualitative and quantitative methodologies, with both group and single-case experimental research designs (e.g, Binger et al., 2008; Petroi et al., 2014). Technical, research, and intervention notes (full peer review): These are brief manuscripts that address methodological, statistical, technical, or clinical issues or innovations that are of relevance to the AAC community and are designed to bring the research community’s attention to areas that have been minimally or poorly researched in the past (e.g., research note: Thunberg et al., 2016; intervention notes: Laubscher et al., 2019).
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