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  2. Audio deepfake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_deepfake

    Audio deepfake technology, also referred to as voice cloning or deepfake audio, is an application of artificial intelligence designed to generate speech that convincingly mimics specific individuals, often synthesizing phrases or sentences they have never spoken.

  3. Mojibake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojibake

    The additional characters are typically the ones that become corrupted, making texts only mildly unreadable with mojibake: å, ä, ö in Finnish and Swedish (š and ΕΎ are present in some Finnish loanwords, é marginally in Swedish, mainly also in loanwords) à, ç, è, é, ï, í, ò, ó, ú, ü in Catalan

  4. Zalgo text - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zalgo_text

    The sentence "The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents", in Zalgo textZalgo text is generated by excessively adding various diacritical marks in the form of Unicode combining characters to the letters in a string of digital text. [4]

  5. Audio inpainting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_inpainting

    Audio inpainting (also known as audio interpolation) is an audio restoration task which deals with the reconstruction of missing or corrupted portions of a digital audio signal. [1] Inpainting techniques are employed when parts of the audio have been lost due to various factors such as transmission errors, data corruption or errors during ...

  6. Reed–Solomon error correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reed–Solomon_error...

    By 1963 (or possibly earlier), J. J. Stone (and others) recognized that Reed–Solomon codes could use the BCH scheme of using a fixed generator polynomial, making such codes a special class of BCH codes, [4] but Reed–Solomon codes based on the original encoding scheme are not a class of BCH codes, and depending on the set of evaluation ...

  7. DECtalk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DECtalk

    DECtalk demo recording using the Perfect Paul and Uppity Ursula voices. DECtalk [4] was a speech synthesizer and text-to-speech technology developed by Digital Equipment Corporation in 1983, [1] based largely on the work of Dennis Klatt at MIT, whose source-filter algorithm was variously known as KlattTalk or MITalk.

  8. Seq2seq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seq2seq

    Shannon's diagram of a general communications system, showing the process by which a message sent becomes the message received (possibly corrupted by noise). seq2seq is an approach to machine translation (or more generally, sequence transduction) with roots in information theory, where communication is understood as an encode-transmit-decode process, and machine translation can be studied as a ...

  9. Noise (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_(signal_processing)

    Noise reduction, the recovery of the original signal from the noise-corrupted one, is a very common goal in the design of signal processing systems, especially filters. The mathematical limits for noise removal are set by information theory .