Text-to-Speech Synthesis

Chapter 10: Signals and Filters

This chapter introduces the fundamentals of the field of signal processing, which studies how signals can be synthesised, analysed and modified. Here, and for the remainder of the book, we use the term signal in a more specific sense than before, in that we take it to mean a waveform that represents a pattern of variation against time. This material describes signals in general, but serves as a precursor to the following chapters which describe the nature of speech signals and how they can be generated, manipulated and modified. This chapter uses the framework of digital signal processing, a widely adopted set of techniques used by engineers to analyse many types of signals.

10.1 Analogue Signals

A signal is a pattern of variation that encodes information. Signals that encode the variation of information over time can be represented by a time waveform, which is often just called a waveform. Figure 10.1 shows an example speech waveform. The horizontal axis represents time and the vertical axis represents amplitude, hence the figure shows how the amplitude of the signal varies with time. The amplitude in a speech signal can represent diverse physical quantities: for example, the variation in air pressure in front of the mouth, the displacement of the diaphragm of a microphone used to record the speech or the voltage in the wire used to transmit the speech. Because the signal is a continuous function of amplitude over time, it is called an analogue signal.

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