State mapping for cross-language speaker adaptation in TTS

2009 
Cross-language speaker adaptation has many interesting applications, e.g. speech-to-speech translation. However, in cross-language speaker adaptation, a common phoneme set, assumed to be used by different speakers of the same language, does not exist any longer. Instead, a nearest neighbor based phoneme mapping from one language to the other has been adopted. In this study, we used our recently proposed sub-phonemic HMM state mapping for cross-language adaptations. The sub-phonemic HMM states, due to their phonetic segment nature, tend to be more sharable across different languages than phonemes. Kullback-Leibler divergence, an information-theoretic measure, is chosen here to measure the similarity between given states in different languages. Experimental results show that new state mapping outperforms the phoneme mapping baseline system in terms of three objective measures: log spectral distance, F0 adaptation error and F0 correlations. In comparing with intra-language adaptation, the cross-language result of the new algorithm is also fairly decent.
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