SDMay 12, 2025
Lightweight End-to-end Text-to-speech Synthesis for low resource on-device applicationsBiel Tura Vecino, Adam Gabryś, Daniel Mątwicki et al. · amazon-science
Recent works have shown that modelling raw waveform directly from text in an end-to-end (E2E) fashion produces more natural-sounding speech than traditional neural text-to-speech (TTS) systems based on a cascade or two-stage approach. However, current E2E state-of-the-art models are computationally complex and memory-consuming, making them unsuitable for real-time offline on-device applications in low-resource scenarios. To address this issue, we propose a Lightweight E2E-TTS (LE2E) model that generates high-quality speech requiring minimal computational resources. We evaluate the proposed model on the LJSpeech dataset and show that it achieves state-of-the-art performance while being up to $90\%$ smaller in terms of model parameters and $10\times$ faster in real-time-factor. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the proposed E2E training paradigm achieves better quality compared to an equivalent architecture trained in a two-stage approach. Our results suggest that LE2E is a promising approach for developing real-time, high quality, low-resource TTS applications for on-device applications.
ASFeb 16, 2022
Voice Filter: Few-shot text-to-speech speaker adaptation using voice conversion as a post-processing moduleAdam Gabryś, Goeric Huybrechts, Manuel Sam Ribeiro et al.
State-of-the-art text-to-speech (TTS) systems require several hours of recorded speech data to generate high-quality synthetic speech. When using reduced amounts of training data, standard TTS models suffer from speech quality and intelligibility degradations, making training low-resource TTS systems problematic. In this paper, we propose a novel extremely low-resource TTS method called Voice Filter that uses as little as one minute of speech from a target speaker. It uses voice conversion (VC) as a post-processing module appended to a pre-existing high-quality TTS system and marks a conceptual shift in the existing TTS paradigm, framing the few-shot TTS problem as a VC task. Furthermore, we propose to use a duration-controllable TTS system to create a parallel speech corpus to facilitate the VC task. Results show that the Voice Filter outperforms state-of-the-art few-shot speech synthesis techniques in terms of objective and subjective metrics on one minute of speech on a diverse set of voices, while being competitive against a TTS model built on 30 times more data.
ASJun 16, 2021
Improving the expressiveness of neural vocoding with non-affine Normalizing FlowsAdam Gabryś, Yunlong Jiao, Viacheslav Klimkov et al.
This paper proposes a general enhancement to the Normalizing Flows (NF) used in neural vocoding. As a case study, we improve expressive speech vocoding with a revamped Parallel Wavenet (PW). Specifically, we propose to extend the affine transformation of PW to the more expressive invertible non-affine function. The greater expressiveness of the improved PW leads to better-perceived signal quality and naturalness in the waveform reconstruction and text-to-speech (TTS) tasks. We evaluate the model across different speaking styles on a multi-speaker, multi-lingual dataset. In the waveform reconstruction task, the proposed model closes the naturalness and signal quality gap from the original PW to recordings by $10\%$, and from other state-of-the-art neural vocoding systems by more than $60\%$. We also demonstrate improvements in objective metrics on the evaluation test set with L2 Spectral Distance and Cross-Entropy reduced by $3\%$ and $6\unicode{x2030}$ comparing to the affine PW. Furthermore, we extend the probability density distillation procedure proposed by the original PW paper, so that it works with any non-affine invertible and differentiable function.