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Home : College of Humanities and Social Science : School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences (Schedule I) : Language Sciences

Speech Synthesis (U03222)

? Credit Points : 20  ? SCQF Level : 10  ? Acronym : PPL-3-SS-LI

This course extends the introduction to speech synthesis
taught in Speech Processing by taking a detailed look at the theory and practice of the state of the art speech synthesis systems. Through the lectures students will learn the theory of speech synthesis and through the lab
sessions and assessment students will learn about the practical application of the theory as they design and build their own synthetic voice for a unit selection speech synthesiser.

Entry Requirements

? Pre-requisites : Speech Processing U03221 or equivalent

? Costs : None

Subject Areas

Delivery Information

? Normal year taken : 3rd year

? Delivery Period : Semester 2 (Blocks 3-4)

? Contact Teaching Time : 2 hour(s) per week for 11 weeks

First Class Information

Date Start End Room Area Additional Information
08/01/2008 14:00 15:50 Room G.04, William Robertson Building Central

All of the following classes

Type Day Start End Area
Lecture Tuesday 14:00 14:50 Central
Laboratory Friday 15:00 15:50 Central

? Additional Class Information : Class information - Tuesday 14.00-15.50 Room G04 WRB; Friday 15.00-15.50 Room B9 AFB

Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes

A student who has attended this course should

Understand the speech synthesis process, and be familiar with the processing steps required to convert text to speech.

Be familiar with the different speech synthesis methods currently used by speech synthesis systems and understand the advantages and disadvantages of each.

Have a detailed understanding of the principles of unit selection speech synthesis, and the issues involved with choosing suitable candidate units to match a given target sequence.

Understand the design issues associated with recording data suitable for building a unit selection voice.

Have the practical experience of having built a synthetic voice themselves.

Be familiar with the different speech coding techniques that can be used for speech synthesis, and understand how these can be used to aid the joining of individual speech segments and how using different signal processing techniques to manipulate speech synthesis output affects the speech quality.

Be in a position to discuss current issues in speech synthesis and see where speech synthesis research is heading in the future.

Assessment Information

100% coursework

Contact and Further Information

The Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries.

Course Secretary

Ms Rosemary Perks
Tel : (0131 6)50 3961
Email : v1rperks@staffmail.ed.ac.uk

Course Organiser

Dr Robert Clark
Tel : (0131 6)51 1767
Email : Rob.Clark@ed.ac.uk

Course Website : http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/teaching/postgrad/modules/ss/

School Website : http://www.ppls.ed.ac.uk/

College Website : http://www.hss.ed.ac.uk/

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