| A few of the most interesting clips
of synthetic speech in Dennis Klatt's archive. |
| 1. |
The VODER, the FIRST EVER electronic
speech synthesis, demonstrated at the New York World's Fair,
1939, by Bell Laboratories. (Archive #1) |
 |
| 2. |
The only MONOTONE SYNTHESIZER ever made! Designed to make research
on speech acoustics very easy. Yet, the man-in-the-street assumes computers
talk with flat intonation. The `Pattern Playback'
contributed greatly to our understanding of speech acoustics. Haskins Laboratories,
New York City, 1951. (Archive #2) |
 |
| 3. |
First song in synthetic speech, "Bicycle Built
for Two" with synthetic piano. This song was reprised by
the `decorticated' Hal in `2001: A Space Odyssey'.
(This is the bonus clip, and was not part of Klatt's collection.) Bell
Laboratories, by Louis Gerstman and Max Mathews, 1961. (Not part of Klatt's
Archive) |
 |
| 4. |
Can you tell the REAL from the ARTIFICIAL?
These short phrases were copied from natural recordings by John Holmes
in 1961. It is quite hard to tell the real from the synthetic. However,
weeks and weeks of labor was required to produce each phrase. (Archive
#7) |
 |
| 5. |
SPEAK-N-SPELL toy. The first mass
produced high-tech speech product. The system announces words to be spelled
using a simple keyboard. Popular for 3-8 year olds in the early 1980s.
(Archive #13) |
 |
| 6. |
MODERN SPEECH SYNTHESIS BY RULE. Dennis
Klatt devoted many years to development of MITalk,
a research system that converted ordinary printed text into intelligible
speech synthesized entirely ``by rule''. (Archive #33)
The commercial version of this system, DECtalk,
comes standardly with the following voice options: |
 |
|
A. `Perfect Paul' --talking at about 300 words/minute
(Archive #36) |
 |
|
B. `Beautiful Betty' (Archive
#35B) |
 |
|
C. `Huge Harry ' (Archive
#35C) |
 |
|
D. `Kit the Kid' (Archive
#35D |
 |
|
E. `Whispering Wendy' (Archive
#35E) |
 |