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2nd SSW 1994: New Paltz, NY, USA
- Second ESCA/IEEE Workshop on Speech Synthesis, SSW 1994, New Paltz, NY, USA, September 12-15, 1994. ISCA 1994
- Janet B. Pierrehumbert, Stefan Frisch:
Source allophony and speech synthesis. 1-4 - Gaël Richard, Christophe d'Alessandro:
Time-domain analysis/synthesis of the aperiodic component of speech signals. 5-8 - Gérard Bailly, Eric Castelli, Bernard Gabioud:
Building prototypes for articulatory speech synthesis. 9-12 - Corine A. Bickley, Kenneth N. Stevens, David R. Williams:
A framework for synthesis of segments based on articulatory parameters. 13-16 - Reiner Wilhelms-Tricarico, Joseph S. Perkell:
Biomechanical and physiologically based speech modeling. 17-20 - Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Crespo, P. Sanz Velasco, L. Monzón-Serrano, José Gregorio Escalada Sardina:
On the use of a sinusoidal model for speech synthesis units. 21-24 - Stephen M. Conway:
Using feed-forward neural networks to produce vowel formant tracks in CVC triphones. 25-28 - Chilin Shih, Benjamin Ao:
Duration study for the AT&t Mandarin text-to-speech system. 29-32 - Pilar Prieto, Jan P. H. van Santen, Julia Hirschberg:
Patterns of f0 peak placement in Mexican Spanish. 33-36 - Hiroshi Hamada, Jin'ichi Chiba:
A GUI-based interactive speech editor for synthetic speech creation. 37-40 - Masanobu Abe, Hideyuki Mizuno:
A strategy for changing speaking styles in text-to-speech systems. 41-44 - Susan R. Hertz, Elizabeth C. Zsiga, Kenneth J. de Jong, Paul Gries, Katherine E. Lockwood:
From database to speech: a multi-dialect relational database integrated with the Eloquence synthesis technology. 45-48 - Thierry Guiard-Marigny, Ali Adjoudani, Christian Benoît:
A 3-d model of the lips for visual speech synthesis. 49-52 - Bertrand Le Goff, Thierry Guiard-Marigny, Michael M. Cohen, Christian Benoît:
Real-time analysis-synthesis and intelligibility of talking faces. 53-56 - Toshio Hirai, Naoto Iwahashi, Norio Higuchi, Yoshinori Sagisaka:
Automatic extraction of FO control parameters using statistical analysis. 57-60 - Nick Campbell:
Prosody and the selection of units for concatenation synthesis. 61-64 - Volker Kraft:
Does the resulting speech quality improvement make a sophisticated concatenation of time-domain synthesis units worthwhile? 65-68 - Steve Pearson, Heather Moran, Kazue Hata, Frode Holm:
Combining concatenation and formant synthesis for improved intelligibility and naturalness in text-to-speech systems. 69-72 - Caroline Henton, Peter Litwinowicz:
Saying and seeing it with feeling: techniques for synthesizing visible, emotional speech. 73-76 - Daniel Hirst, Nancy Ide, Jean Véronis:
Coding fundamental frequency patterns for multi-lingual synthesis with INTSINT in the MULTEXT project. 77-80 - Luís C. Oliveira:
Text-to-speech synthesis with dynamic control of source parameters. 81-84 - Jon P. Iles, William H. Edmondson:
Feature driven formant synthesis. 85-88 - David Talkin, Colin W. Wightman:
The aligner: text to speech alignment using Markov models and a pronunciation dictionary. 89-92 - Andrej Ljolje, Julia Hirschberg, Jan P. H. van Santen:
Automatic speech segmentation for concatenative inventory selection. 93-96 - Bernd J. Kröger:
Generating articulatory movement patterns by a segmental and a gestural production model. 97-100 - Plínio Barbosa, Gérard Bailly:
Generation of pauses within the z-score model. 101-104 - Bert Van Coile, A. de Zitter, Luc Van Tichelen, Annemie Vorstermans:
Prosody transplantation in text-to-speech: applications and tools. 105-108 - Cecil H. Coker:
Articulatory text to speech. 109 - Mary E. Beckman:
Speech models and speech synthesis. 110 - Olivier Boëffard, Fábio Violaro:
Improving the robustness of text-to-speech synthesizers for large prosodic variations. 111-114 - Thomas Portele, Florian Höfer, Wolfgang Hess:
A mixed inventory structure for German concatenative synthesis. 115-118 - Alistair Conkie, Stephen Isard:
Optimal coupling of diphones. 119-122 - Inger Karlsson, Lennart Neovius:
Rule-based female speech synthesis - segmental level improvements. 123-126 - H. Timothy Bunnell, Debra Yarrington, Kenneth E. Barner:
Pitch control in diphone synthesis. 127-130 - Kenneth N. Ross, Mari Ostendorf:
A dynamical system model for generating F0 for synthesis. 131-134 - Norio Higuchi, Toshio Hirai, Yoshinori Sagisaka:
Effect of speaking style on parameters of fundamental frequency contour. 135-138 - Bernd Möbius:
A quantitative model of German intonation and its application to speech synthesis. 139-142 - Sigismund Frenkenberger, Betina Schnabel, M. Alissali, Markus Kommenda:
Prosodic parsing based on parsing of minimal syntactic structures. 143-146 - Angelien Sanderman:
How can prosody segment the flow of (synthetic) speech? 147-150 - Klaus J. Kohler:
Parametric control of prosodic variables by symbolic input in TTS synthesis. 151-154 - Christophe d'Alessandro, Piet Mertens, Frédéric Beaugendre:
Automatic stylization of intonation: application to speech synthesis. 155-158 - Julia Hirschberg, Pilar Prieto:
Training intonational phrasing rules automatically for English and Spanish text-to-speech. 159-162 - Jan-Roelof de Pijper:
High-quality message-to-speech generation in a practical application. 163-166 - Keikichi Hirose, Mayumi Sakata, Masafumi Osame, Hiroya Fujisaki:
Analysis and synthesis of fundamental frequency contours for the spoken dialogue in Japanese. 167-170 - Alex I. C. Monaghan:
Intonation accent placement in a concept-to-dialogue system. 171-174 - Paul A. Taylor, Alan W. Black:
Synthesizing conversational intonation from a linguistically rich input. 175-178 - Evelyne Tzoukermann:
Text-to-speech for French. 179-182 - Giuliano Ferri, Piero Pierucci, Donatella Sanzone:
An integrated morpho-syntactic analysis with phonetic transcription for an Italian text-to-speech system. 183-186 - Richard Sproat, Joseph P. Olive:
A modular architecture for multi-lingual text-to-speech. 187-190 - Carsten Günther, Claudia Maienborn, Andrea Schopp:
SYNPHONICS - a cognitive motivated approach to a concept-to-speech system. 191-194 - Andrew P. Breen:
The BT Laureate text-to-speech system. 195-198 - Walter Daelemans, Antal van den Bosch:
A language-independent, data-oriented architecture for grapheme-to-phoneme conversion. 199-202 - Louis C. W. Pols, Ute Jekosch:
A structured way of looking at the performance of text-to-speech systems. 203-206 - Lourdes Aguilar, Josep M. Fernández, Juan María Garrido, Joaquim Llisterri, Alejandro Macarrón, Luis Monzón, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Crespo:
Evaluation of a Spanish text-to-speech system. 207-210 - Karim Belhoula, Marianne Kugler, Regina Krüger, Hans-Wilhelm Rühl:
Evaluation of a TTS-system intended for the synthesis of names. 211-214 - David B. Pisoni:
Perceptual evaluation of synthetic speech: what have we learned over the last 15 years and where are we going in the future? 215 - Catherine Pelachaud, Scott Prevost:
Sight and sound: generating facial expressions and spoken intonation from context. 216-219 - Merle Horne, Marcus Filipsson:
Computational extraction of lexico-grammatical information for generation of Swedish intonation. 220-223 - Erwin Marsi, Peter-Arno Coppen, Carlos Gussenhoven, Toni C. M. Rietveld:
Prosodic and intonational domains in speech synthesis. 224-227 - Christine H. Nakatani:
Discourse structural constraints on accent in narrative. 228-231 - Arthur Dirksen, John Coleman:
All-prosodic synthesis architecture. 232-235 - John Local, Richard Ogden:
A model of timiny for non-segmental phonological structure. 236-239 - Jan P. H. van Santen:
Using statistics in text-to-speech system construction. 240-243 - David Yarowsky:
Homograph disambiguation in speech synthesis. 244-247
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