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  2. Festival Speech Synthesis System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Festival_Speech_Synthesis...

    The Festival Speech Synthesis System is a general multi-lingual speech synthesis system originally developed by Alan W. Black, Paul Taylor and Richard Caley [1] at the Centre for Speech Technology Research (CSTR) at the University of Edinburgh. Substantial contributions have also been provided by Carnegie Mellon University and other sites.

  3. FreeTTS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeTTS

    FreeTTS is an implementation of Sun's Java Speech API. FreeTTS supports end-of-speech markers. Gnopernicus uses these in a number of places: to know when text should and should not be interrupted, to better concatenate speech, and to sequence speech in different voices.

  4. Comparison of speech synthesizers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_speech...

    Festival Speech Synthesis System: CSTR? 2014, December MIT-like license: FreeTTS: Paul Lamere Philip Kwok Dirk Schnelle-Walka Willie Walker... 2001, December 14 2009, March 9 BSD: LumenVox: LumenVox: 2011 2019 Proprietary: Microsoft Speech API: Microsoft: 1995 2012 Bundled with Windows: VoiceText: ReadSpeaker (Formerly Neospeech) 2002 2017 ...

  5. List of free and open-source software packages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_free_and_open...

    CMU Sphinx – Speech recognition software from Carnegie Mellon University; Emacspeak – Audio desktop; ESpeak – Compact software speech synthesizer for English and other languages; Festival Speech Synthesis System – General multilingual speech synthesis; Modular Audio Recognition Framework – Voice, audio, speech NLP processing

  6. Category:Free speech synthesis software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Free_speech...

    Pages in category "Free speech synthesis software" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. ... Festival Speech Synthesis System; FreeTTS; G.

  7. MBROLA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MBROLA

    MBROLA is speech synthesis software as a worldwide collaborative project. The MBROLA project web page provides diphone databases for many [1] spoken languages.. The MBROLA software is not a complete speech synthesis system for all those languages; the text must first be transformed into phoneme and prosodic information in MBROLA's format, and separate software (e.g. eSpeakNG) is necessary.

  8. eSpeak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESpeak

    eSpeak is a free and open-source, cross-platform, compact, software speech synthesizer.It uses a formant synthesis method, providing many languages in a relatively small file size. eSpeakNG (Next Generation) is a continuation of the original developer's project with more feedback from native speakers.

  9. Alan W. Black - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_W._Black

    Black wrote the Festival Speech Synthesis System at Edinburgh, and continues to develop it at Carnegie Mellon. He has also worked on machine translation of speech at CMU, [3] and is the co-founder and was chief scientist at Cepstral, a Pittsburgh-based speech translation technology company. [4] [5]