What is Text-to-Speech (TTS)
The conversion of written text into spoken audio.
Definition
Text-to-Speech (TTS) is the conversion of written text into spoken audio. In practical AI work, it helps teams connect a concept to data, model behavior, product choices, evaluation, and risk. The useful question is not only what the term means, but how it affects quality, cost, reliability, safety, and decisions in a real workflow.
Example
A language system uses Text-to-Speech (TTS) to analyze, transform, generate, or understand text and speech.
Why it matters
Text-to-Speech (TTS) matters because the conversion of written text into spoken audio can change how teams build, evaluate, choose, or govern AI systems. It helps systems work with human language in search, support, writing, analysis, speech, and knowledge workflows.
How it works
Text or speech is cleaned, segmented, represented as tokens or embeddings, then classified, searched, transformed, generated, or aligned with a task. For Text-to-Speech (TTS), the key is to connect the definition with inputs, assumptions, measurable outcomes, and deployment limits.
Where it is used
- Used in search, chatbots, translation, summarization, sentiment analysis, extraction, transcription, speech, and voice interfaces.
Limitations
Language systems can miss context, mishandle domain terms, amplify bias, or produce confident but wrong outputs.
