Education: Difference between revisions

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{|style="background-color:#CCFFCC; border:1px dashed #a0a0a0;" width=100%  
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|width=50%| ETH Zürich, Switzerland, [http://www.tik.ee.ethz.ch/~spr/ TIK]  
|width=50%| ETH Zürich, Switzerland, [http://www.tik.ee.ethz.ch/~spr/ TIK]  
| Beat Pfister, Christof Traber
| Beat Pfister
|-
|-
| KTH Stockholm, Sweden, [http://www.speech.kth.se/ Department of Speech Music and Hearing]
| KTH Stockholm, Sweden, [http://www.speech.kth.se/ Department of Speech Music and Hearing]

Revision as of 17:42, 5 April 2006

"During the initial meetings of the ESCA (now ISCA) speech synthesis SIG (SynSIG) at the ICSLP conference in Sydney 1998 many of us felt that we should devote some of our efforts to improve our teaching activities at universities and other academic institutions. Although everybody has his own way of teaching we can improve our courses by sharing experience and already prepared course material. This web page is devoted to this task." (text by Gregor Möhler)


Organizations involved in teaching speech synthesis

Organization Teaching staff (in speech synthesis)
ETH Zürich, Switzerland, TIK Beat Pfister
KTH Stockholm, Sweden, Department of Speech Music and Hearing Inger Karlsson
Oregon Graduate Institute, USA, CSLU (Speech Synthesis Research Group) Jan Van Santen, Ricahrd Sproat
University of Bonn, Germany, IKP Wolfgang Hess
Universtity of Cottbus, Germany, Lehrstuhl Kommunikationstechnik Klaus Fellbaum
University of Dresden, Germany, IAS Rüdiger Hoffmann
University of Edinburgh, U.K., CSTR Paul Taylor
University of Grenoble, France, ICP Gerard Bailly
Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp), Brasil, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem Plinio Almeida Barbosa
Faculté Polytechnique de Mons, Belgium, TTS research group Thierry Dutoit
University Paris XI, France, LIMSI Christophe d'Alessandro
University of Stuttgart, Germany, IMS (Chair of Experimental Phonetics) Gregor Möhler, Bernd Möbius


Courses in speech synthesis

Introductory courses

Specific topics

Tutorials

Historical images

Take a look at our gallery of historical images.

Educational Software

KPE

  • The KPE80 program provides a graphical interface for the implementation of the Klatt 1980 formant synthesiser. The interface allows users to display and edit Klatt parameters using a graphical display which includes the time-amplitude waveform of both the original speech and its synthetic copy, and some signal analysis facilities.
  • KPE and many other University College London softwares

MBROLA

  • The aim of the MBROLA project, initiated by the TCTS Lab of the Faculté Polytechnique de Mons (Belgium), is to obtain a set of speech synthesizers for as many languages as possible, and provide them free for non-commercial applications. The ultimate goal is to boost academic research on speech synthesis, and particularly on prosody generation, known as one of the biggest challenges taken up by Text-To-Speech synthesizers for the years to come.
  • MBROLA

Praat

  • A system for doing phonetics by computer. The computer program Praat is a research, publication, and productivity tool for phoneticians. With it, you can analyse, synthesize, and manipulate speech, and create high-quality pictures for your articles and thesis.
  • Praat

CSLU Toolkit

  • The CSLU Toolkit was created to provide the basic framework and tools for people to build, investigate and use interactive language systems. These systems incorporate leading-edge speech recognition, natural language understanding, speech synthesis and facial animation.
  • CSLU Toolkit

TrackDraw

  • TrackDraw is a graphical interface for controlling the parameters of a speech synthesizer.
  • TrackDraw

Wavesurfer

  • Wavesurfer is a tool for doing speech analysis. The analysis features include formants and pitch extraction and real time spectrograms. The Wavesurfer tool built on top of the Snack speech visualization module, is highly modular and extensible at several levels.
  • WaveSurfer

External Links