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GitHub - yl4579/StyleTTS2: StyleTTS 2: Towards Human-Level Text-to-Speech through Style Diffusion and Adversarial Training with Large Speech Language Models

StyleTTS 2: Towards Human-Level Text-to-Speech through Style Diffusion and Adversarial Training with Large Speech Language Models - GitHub - yl4579/StyleTTS2: StyleTTS 2: Towards Human-Level Text-to-Speech through Style Diffusion and Adversarial Training with Large Speech Language Models

Japan
Japanese
Vinays-raghavan
Yinghao-aaron-li
Cong-han
Nima-mesgarani
Gavin-mischler
Towards-human-level-text-to-speech
Style-diffusion
Adversarial-training
Large-speech-language

How do our brains process speech in noisy environments?

A new study explains why we struggle to keep track of more than one conversation at a dinner party.

Columbia-university
New-york
United-states
Mark-waghorn
Vinay-raghavan
Nima-mesgarani

Experts provide neural evidence for the glimpsing model of speech perception

Researchers led by Dr. Nima Mesgarani at Columbia University, US, report that the brain treats speech in a crowded room differently depending on how easy it is to hear, and whether we are focusing on it. Publishing June 6th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the study uses a combination of neural recordings and computer modeling to show that when we follow speech that is being drowned out by louder voices, phonetic information is encoded differently than in the opposite situation. The findings could help improve hearing aids that work by isolating attended speech.

Vinay-raghavan
Lily-ramsey
Nima-mesgarani-at-columbia-university
Columbia-university
Nima-mesgarani
Study-lead-author
Brain
Speech
Kids
Vortex
Hearing

Two brain mechanisms for picking speech out o

Researchers led by Dr. Nima Mesgarani at Columbia University, US, report that the brain treats speech in a crowded room differently depending on how easy it is to hear, and whether we are focusing on it. Publishing June 6th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the study uses a combination of neural recordings and computer modeling to show that when we follow speech that is being drowned out by louder voices, phonetic information is encoded differently than in the opposite situation. The findings could help improve hearing aids that work by isolating attended speech.

United-states
Vinay-raghavan
Nima-mesgarani-at-columbia-university
Columbia-university
National-institutes-of-health
National-institute-on-deafness
Nima-mesgarani
National-institutes
National-institute

How do our brains process speech in noisy environments?

A new study explains why we struggle to keep track of more than one conversation at a dinner party.

Columbia-university
New-york
United-states
Vinay-raghavan
Nima-mesgarani
Mark-waghorn

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