Speech Synthesis from Text and Ultrasound Tongue Image-based Articulatory Input
This work addresses speech synthesis enhancement for applications like Silent Speech Interfaces, but it is incremental as it extends existing DNN-TTS methods with articulatory data.
The paper tackled improving speech synthesis by combining text and ultrasound-based articulatory inputs, showing that this combination increases naturalness in limited-data scenarios compared to text-only input.
Articulatory information has been shown to be effective in improving the performance of HMM-based and DNN-based text-to-speech synthesis. Speech synthesis research focuses traditionally on text-to-speech conversion, when the input is text or an estimated linguistic representation, and the target is synthesized speech. However, a research field that has risen in the last decade is articulation-to-speech synthesis (with a target application of a Silent Speech Interface, SSI), when the goal is to synthesize speech from some representation of the movement of the articulatory organs. In this paper, we extend traditional (vocoder-based) DNN-TTS with articulatory input, estimated from ultrasound tongue images. We compare text-only, ultrasound-only, and combined inputs. Using data from eight speakers, we show that that the combined text and articulatory input can have advantages in limited-data scenarios, namely, it may increase the naturalness of synthesized speech compared to single text input. Besides, we analyze the ultrasound tongue recordings of several speakers, and show that misalignments in the ultrasound transducer positioning can have a negative effect on the final synthesis performance.