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Speech synthesis software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sinsy (Singing Voice Synthesis System) (しぃんしぃ) is an online Hidden Markov model (HMM)-based singing voice synthesis system by the Nagoya Institute of Technology that was created under the Modified BSD license.[1]
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines for products and services. (February 2015) |
Developer(s) | Nagoya Institute of Technology |
---|---|
Stable release | 0.92
/ December 25, 2015 |
Preview release | 3.9
/ 2017/12/25 |
Operating system | Linux |
Available in | Japanese, English, Chinese |
Type | Vocal Synthesizer Application |
License | Modified BSD license |
Website | www |
The online demonstrator is free to use, but will only generate tracks up to 5 minutes. The user uploads data in the MusicXML format, which the Sinsy website reads to output a WAV file of the generated voice. Gender factor, vibrato intensity, and pitch shift can be adjusted prior to output.[2]
As of December 25, 2015, the official developers of Sinsy were Keiichi Tokuda (Producer and designer), Keiichiro Oura (Design and Development),[3] Kazuhiro Nakamura (Development and Main Maintainer), and Yoshihiko Nankaku.[4]
It was originally only in Japanese and English, but Mandarin was later added; the website only supports English and Japanese despite this currently.[5][6]
In 2016, Sinsy stated using the deep learning processing technology DNN.[7]
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