Amazon is Teaching Alexa To Speak Like a Newscaster (theverge.com) 49
The way newscasters speak is unmistakeable, with their exaggerated modulations and drawn-out pauses. And now, Amazon has taught Alexa, its voice assistant, to approximate the authoritative intonation. From a report: You can listen to samples of the speaking style here, and the results, well, they speak for themselves. The voice can't be mistaken for a human, but it does incorporates stresses into sentences in the same way you'd expect from a TV or radio newscaster. According to Amazon's own surveys, users prefer it to Alexa's regular speaking style when listening to articles (though getting news from smart speakers still has lots of other problems).
Amazon says the new speaking style is enabled by by the company's development of "neural text-to-speech" technology or NTTS. This is the next generation of speech synthesis, that use machine learning to generate expressive voices more quickly. Currently, Alexa uses concatenative speech synthesis, a method that's been around for decades. This involves breaking up speech samples into distinct sounds (known as phonemes) and then stitching them back together to form new words and sentences.
Amazon says the new speaking style is enabled by by the company's development of "neural text-to-speech" technology or NTTS. This is the next generation of speech synthesis, that use machine learning to generate expressive voices more quickly. Currently, Alexa uses concatenative speech synthesis, a method that's been around for decades. This involves breaking up speech samples into distinct sounds (known as phonemes) and then stitching them back together to form new words and sentences.
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Didn't you hear? The Mouse has struck the Clone Wars from the canon.
There will be no further mention!
Now, do we have a problem?
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Is there a difference?
Missing a golden opportunity (Score:2)
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Can you imagine a generation of kids brought up by Amazon?
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Nope. Needs a Kent Brockman voice!
Gairld Foahd eaten by wahlves. (Score:2)
Tom Brokaw gets my vote.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
I agree
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Win this week's trivia quiz, and you too can have Carl Kassell's voice on your home surveillance device!
Regional accents and AI (Score:2)
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It lets Amazon and random app- and malware- makers perform unlimited surveillance on you and your home for fun and profit. Why's that so hard to understand?
Oh, you mean for the people paying for the privilege of installing them in their home? It lets them set timers, toggle lamps and fans, and change the "radio" station, all just by giving verbal commands! Oh, and it lets you get variably accurate answers to random questions without having to type them in to google by hand, or activate your phone's voice a
Sweet, will it also teach Alexa (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, I know, off topic. But maybe not. If we can replace the few honest news anchors left with robots that parrot the party line then it'll be establishment propaganda 24/7. Heck, they'll have to make it 25/8 just to fit all that nonsense in. And it's not like they can't change it, since they'll make the rules.
So it's going to be preachy and condescending? (Score:2)
Don't we get enough of that from the political elites?
Paul Harvey! (Score:2)
Paul Harvey please. Thank you.
A better demonstration.... (Score:2)
Get it to say "I'm Ron Burgundy?"
It won't ... (Score:2)
Please no! (Score:4, Funny)
Sooo (Score:2)
Teaching it how to lie and only give opinions - no facts.
*American* newscasters (Score:2)
"exaggerated modulations and drawn-out pauses"
in the USA, yes. In Europe, we find this to be unnatural, irritating, even ridiculous. We do not want to be hectored at high volume from the TV, we want to be informed in a measured and evenly-spoken fashion.
So Alexa is optimising for just one market's cultural communication preferences - a typical internationalisation failure by a large corporation.
So lying? (Score:2)