Speech Synthesis: Multilingual and Cross-Lingual Approaches

Wed-2-11-4 Phonological features for 0-shot multilingual speech synthesis

Marlene Staib(Papercup), Tian Huey Teh(Papercup Technologies), Alexandra Torresquintero(Papercup Technologies), Devang Savita Ram Mohan(Papercup Technologies), Lorenzo Foglianti(Papercup Technologies), Raphael Lenain(Novoic) and Jiameng Gao(Papercup Technologies)
Abstract: Code-switching - the intra-utterance use of multiple languages - is prevalent across the world. Within text-to-speech (TTS), multilingual models have been found to enable code-switching. By modifying the linguistic input to sequence-to-sequence TTS, we show that code-switching is possible for languages unseen during training, even within monolingual models. We use a small set of phonological features derived from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), such as vowel height and frontness, consonant place and manner. This allows the model topology to stay unchanged for different languages, and enables new, previously unseen feature combinations to be interpreted by the model. We show that this allows us to generate intelligible, code-switched speech in a new language at test time, including the approximation of sounds never seen in training.
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