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Search results for the Tag keyword: synthetic voice
A quick way to get Stuart to work with PDFaloud
By Paul Nisbet on Thursday 13th October, 2011 at 4:29pm
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Following on from the previous post re PDFaloud not offering you Stuart, Robert here in CALL has written a script which finds all the PDFaloud safe voice lists on your Windows computer and adds Stuart to them.
Here's what to do:
- Install Stuart first.
- Save the file to your computer.
- Find the file (it's called install-stuart-to-safevoices.zip.), double click on it to open or unzip it, and then double click on "install.cmd"
- It will then update the PDFaloud safe voices with Stuart.
- Restart Adobe Reader and PDFaloud should offer you Stuart.
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New Equipment at CALL: Tobii Communication Devices
By Joanna Courtney on Monday 22nd August, 2011 at 10:19am
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Tobii Communication Devices
Tobii are best known for their 'MyTobii' eye gaze technology, but actually make a range of devices.
- the original P10 eyegaze computer
- the new C12 and C15 communication aids
- CEye eye gaze control unit (for use with C12 and C15)
- the PCEye control unit for eye gaze access to a computer
- portable communication aid called the C8 (no eye gaze access)
- medium tech aid with recorded speech called the S32
CALL have recently purchased this whole range of devices, which are available on 'restricted loan' to assessment clients and will also be used for demonstrations and training.
The following few blogs will give an overview of each of the devices, what they can do and who they may be suitable for.
Tobii C8 communication aid
The Tobii C8 is a computer based communication aid with an 8.4 inch (20.5cm) touchscreen. It is lightweight (1.8kg) and powerful and can be used either as a portable or wheelchair mounted device. It has long battery life ( 6hrs ) and also has hot swappable batteries so you can charge the device without having to turn it off and take it away from the user. The interchangeable coloured side panels make it easy to customise (green, pink, blue, purple) and the two powerful stereo speakers give the C8 great sound quality. It has a stand and a removable carry strap, but no built-in handle.
The main difference between the C8 and the larger C12 and C15 devices is that it has 2 speakers (they have 4) and that while the C8 can be used with a variety of access methods (direct touch, 1 and 2 switch, joystick, etc) it cannot accommodate eye gaze access (whereas the C12 and C15 can).
This device could be suitable for users who need a light-weight portable device with synthetic speech and who would like to use additional Windows based software and Sapi 5 Scottish voices, which cannot be used with designated communication devices at a similar level e.g. Vantage Lite.
The C8 comes with Tobii Communicator Standard edition package, which includes several communication programs allowing communication using text or with over 15,000 Symbolstix symbols. The CALL device includes the upgrade, Tobii Communicator Premium, which includes email, text messaging and environmental control. Acapela voices are included with the device and you can also use recorded speech, if required. The device also has a built-in camera so that the user can take photos and use them on their communication pages.
As the C8 is Windows 7 based, other communication software can also be installed and CALL's C8 has the Grid 2 as an alternative option to Tobii Communicator. Being Windows based also means that Sapi 5 voices like 'Scottish Heather' and the soon to be released 'Scottish Stuart' voice are installed on this device ready for use, as well as on the C12 and C15.
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The Scottish Male Voice is chosen!
By Paul Nisbet on Tuesday 14th June, 2011 at 3:54pm
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Well the votes are in and we can now reveal that the winner is....... SPA!
We emailed samples of six male voices out to people who had downloaded Heather, to key contacts in local authorities, FE colleges and Universities, to ICTSLS, members of SICTDG, members of Augmentative Communication in Practice Scotland, and to children and young people who use Assistive Technology.
We received feedback, comments and scores from 82 people. SPA got the highest overall score, and was also the voice that most people preferred as the first and second choice.
SPA went into the recording studio a few weeks ago to start recording about 30 hours worth of reading, and we
understand that he has just finished the recording. It will take CereProc a few weeks to process the recordings and create the voice, and we hope to have it available for download from our Scottish Voice web site by the start of the new school term.
We now need a name... and we might have a vote for that too... so watch this space.
Thanks to everyone who listened to the voices and gave us the feedback.
Paul
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Remaking Roger Ebert's Voice
By Allan Wilson on Thursday 21st April, 2011 at 8:12am
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Cereproc, the Edinburgh-based company who produced Heather, the Scottish Voice, also created a new voice for Roger Ebert, the American film critic who lost his speech due to cancer, which allowed him to commentate on last year's Oscars. Roger gave a very interesting talk on the remaking of his voice at the TED conference in the United States earlier this year. With a little help from his friends, he describes his medical condition and the impact that losing his voice had upon his life. He then goes on to talk about using computer voices and the construction of a new voice by Cereproc using some of his past recordings. He concludes with some powerful comments about attitudes towards people with disabilities.
Definitely worth a watch!
Cereproc are currently working with CALL to produce a new male Scottish computer voice - a 'brother' for Heather.
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Funding for a male Scottish Voice approved!
By Paul Nisbet on Monday 7th March, 2011 at 2:29pm
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We are very pleased to announce that the Scottish Government has awarded us funding to work with CereProc to develop a male Scottish computer voice: a 'brother for Heather'. The funding will also pay for a licence for the entire public sector in Scotland, so that the voice can be used by school-age pupils, further and higher education students, workers in the public sector, and NHS patients.
Heather has been very well received by Scottish learners and pupils and we hope that the new male voice will be just as successful. It should certainly provide a better option for Scots boys with speech and language difficulties who use voice output communication aids, because at present they have a choice of speaking with very adult and very English voices, or one of a few rather low-fi Amercian children's accents, or with a female voice.
CereProc are currently advertising for a voice actor to provide the 'male voice of Scottish education'. A short list of suitable voices will then be drawn up and then the most suitable person chosen. The 'chosen one' then goes into a recording studio and spends many hours reading from texts, and then CereProc's engineers use these recordings to create the computer voice.
We'll keep you posted on progress.
In the meantime, if anyone has suggestions for a good name for the male Scottish voice (Euan? Ian? Hamish? Graham? David? Jimmy? Angus? Rab? Rhuaridh?) why not post a comment to let us know!
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Bespoke voices for your voice output communication system
By Paul Nisbet on Tuesday 23rd February, 2010 at 3:45pm
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Heather, the Scottish Voice, which can be downloaded free from CALL's Scottish Voice web site by anyone in Scottish schools, is a product of CereProc, an Edinburgh based company. CereProc make 'custom' voices by recording and synthesising human speech, and one possibility is to create bespoke computer voices for people who are likely to lose their speech as a result of illness or disability. CereProc have created a synthetic voice for Robert Ebert, an American film critic, who lost his voice after surgery. The voice was created by analysing the recordings made for Robert Ebert's TV series. This is fine if you are a well-known (in the USA) TV broadcaster, but not so good if the sum total of the recordings of your voice consists of a few warbles from your childhood or speeches at weddings and the like. Nevertheless, it's good to see progress like this because better synthetic voices, greater individuality and more personalisation all improve the communicative experience with voice output communication aids. Certainly, the response we have had to Heather, the Scottish Voice, has been extremely positive both when she is used for communication and also when reading out digital books, learning resources and exam papers. To find out more about the voices visit the CereProc web site.
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