China Daily Global Edition (USA)

IFlytek marries voice tech with artificial intelligen­ce

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

In November 2016, US President Barack Obama in Washington “addressed” a conference in Beijing via a video link and highlighte­d the big leaps made by artificial intelligen­ce or AI. As if to underscore his point, Obama switched to fluent Chinese and joked he wanted to contribute to China’s developmen­t in his post-retirement years.

Well, turned out, it was not really Obama who made that speech. For the record: the former US president hardly knows Chinese. The video clip was produced by iFlytek Co Ltd using AI, to demonstrat­e its speech synthesis capability, which can produce human voice.

The audience was wowed by the machine’s ability to reproduce Obama’s tone, intonation­s, inflection­s and pitch in Chinese words.

The video is part of iFlytek’s broad efforts to tap into voice computing, which is said to be the next major medium for man-machine interactio­n.

The company was founded in 1999 by a group of researcher­s from the University of Science and Technology of China. iFlytek is the Chinese counterpar­t of the US firm Nuance Communicat­ions Inc and Siri, the virtual voice assistant developed by Apple Inc.

“We aim to offer key technologi­es needed for the era of voice interactio­n,” Liu Qingfeng, chairman of iFlytek, said. The company is in fierce competitio­n with Baidu Inc for supremacy in the burgeoning sector.

In Blizzard Challenge 2016, a global competitio­n to test speech synthesis, iFlytek secured the crown in computer-based production of human-like voice in Chinese, English and Hindi languages. The score for Chinese synthesis reached 4.5 points, roughly meaning its computeriz­ed speech sounds like that of a TV news bulletin anchor.

Last year, the company also prevailed in the Winograd Schema Challenge, a wellrecogn­ized global competi-

tion to test machine intelligen­ce.

The technology is widely used to enhance peoples’ lives. As of April, about 300,000 startups are using the firm’s voice computing platform to work on different applicatio­ns ranging from smart house appliances, robots to conversati­onsavvy stuffed toys. Last year, there were half that number of firms using that technology, suggesting its adoption rate is increasing rapidly.

 ?? XINHUA ?? An employee of iFlytek demonstrat­es a voice-controlled speaker at an expo in Hefei, Anhui province.
XINHUA An employee of iFlytek demonstrat­es a voice-controlled speaker at an expo in Hefei, Anhui province.

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