Traditional voice conversion (VC) has been focused on speaker identity conversion for speech with a neutral expression. We note that emotional expression plays an essential role in daily communication, and the emotional style of speech can be speaker-dependent. In this paper, we study the technique to jointly convert the speaker identity and speakerdependent emotional style, that is called expressive voice conversion. We propose a StarGAN-based framework to learn a many-to-many mapping across different speakers, that takes into account speaker-dependent emotional style without the need for parallel data. To achieve this, we condition the generator on emotional style encoding derived from a pre-trained speech emotion recognition (SER) model. The experiments validate the effectiveness of our proposed framework in both objective and subjective evaluations. To our best knowledge, this is the first study on expressive voice conversion.
Cross-lingual voice conversion aims to change source speaker's voice to sound like that of target speaker, when source and target speakers speak different languages. It relies on nonparallel training data from two different languages, hence, is more challenging than mono-lingual voice conversion. Previous studies on cross-lingual voice conversion mainly focus on spectral conversion with a linear transformation for F0 transfer. However, as an important prosodic factor, F0 is inherently hierarchical, thus it is insufficient to just use a linear method for conversion. We propose the use of continuous wavelet transform (CWT) decomposition for F0 modeling. CWT provides a way to decompose a signal into different temporal scales that explain prosody in different time resolutions. We also propose to train two Cycle-GAN pipelines for spectrum and prosody mapping respectively. In this way, we eliminate the need for parallel data of any two languages and any alignment techniques. Experimental results show that our proposed Spectrum-Prosody-CycleGAN framework outperforms the Spectrum-CycleGAN baseline in subjective evaluation. To our best knowledge, this is the first study of prosody in cross-lingual voice conversion.
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