@conference {wester:artificial:IS2015, title = {Artificial Personality and Disfluency}, booktitle = {Proc. of Interspeech}, year = {2015}, month = {September}, address = {Dresden}, abstract = {The focus of this paper is artificial voices with different personalities. Previous studies have shown links between an individual\&$\#$39;s use of disfluencies in their speech and their perceived personality. Here, filled pauses (uh and um) and discourse markers (like, you know, I mean) have been included in synthetic speech as a way of creating an artificial voice with different personalities. We discuss the automatic insertion of filled pauses and discourse markers (i.e., fillers) into otherwise fluent texts. The automatic system is compared to a ground truth of human \"acted\" filler insertion. Perceived personality (as defined by the big five personality dimensions) of the synthetic speech is assessed by means of a standardised questionnaire. Synthesis without fillers is compared to synthesis with either spontaneous or synthetic fillers. Our findings explore how the inclusion of disfluencies influences the way in which subjects rate the perceived personality of an artificial voice.}, url = {http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/mwester/publications/wester:artificial:IS2015.pdf}, author = {Wester, Mirjam and Aylett, Matthew and Tomalin, Marcus and Dall, Rasmus} }