Festival is currently actively developed by: Alan W Black (Carnegie Mellon University) Rob Clark (Edinburgh University) Korin Richmond (Edinburgh University) Heiga Zen (Nagoya Institute of Technology) The following people and organisations have contributed to the development of Festival in various ways. It is their work that makes it all possible. Alan W Black Overall design, most of the front end and software control Paul Taylor Overall design, most of the back end Rob Clark Intonation, multisyn voice building, general developement and maintenance. Korin Richmond Multisyn engine, swig wrappers and general developement. Heiga Zen HTS engine Brian Foley Mac OSX support Richard Caley for doing lots of difficult and boring bits Kevin Lenzo for speaking a bunch of different nonsense words, design and improvements to the clunits module, and co-author of the whole festvox project Alistair Conkie various low level code points and some design work Spanish synthesis, recording Roger Steve Isard design of diphone schema, LPC diphone code, and directorship EPSRC who funded awb and pault Carnegie Mellon University who fund awb David Huggins Daines (Cepstral, LLC) configure, and lots of Linux associated bugs Sun Microsystems Laboratories For believing in us and their generosity. AT&T Research Labs For providing funding and using our work Paradigm Assoc. and George Carrett For Scheme In One Defun CNET, France Telecom for use of Donovan diphones and some code in modules/donovan (used with permission) The beta testers Thanks for wanting to use the system, you make it worth doing. (And thanks for helping me debug my code.) You all responded to my requests fast and accurately thanks, even when I dumped last minute changes on you Andy Donovan for speaking a bunch of nonsense words Roger Burroughes for speaking another bunch of nonsense words Kurt Dusterhoff for speaking another bunch of nonsense words Amy Isard for her SSML project and related synthesizer Mike Macon for signal processing advice Richard Tobin for answering all those difficult questions, and the socket code, and rxp the XML parser Simmule Turner and Rich Salz command line editor: editline Borja Etxebarria For Spanish synthesis and answer signal processing questions Briony Williams Welsh synthesis Jacques H. de Villiers from CSLU at OGI, for the TCL interface. ATR and Nick Campbell for first allowing Paul and Alan to work together Oxford Text Archive For the computer users version of Oxford Advanced Learners' Dictionary redistributed with permission Reading University for access to MARSEC from which the phrase break model was trained. Mari Ostendorf For giving access to the FM Radio Corpus from which some models were trained. LDC & Penn Tree Bank from which the POS ragger was trained, redistribution of the models is with permission from the LDC. Grady Ward for the MOBY pronunciation lexicon FSF for G++, make, .... and others too.