The present invention relates to a method and system for providing voice services. Automated Voice User Interfaces (VUI's) use voice synthesis technology to converse with a caller in a dialogue. Callers become used to this synthesized voice in the dialogue. In many instances however, it is necessary to transfer the call to a human agent if a caller's needs cannot be met by the VUI. Invariably, the voice that a caller hears when linked to the VUI is quite different from the sound of the human voice when the caller is transferred to an agent. Sometimes a caller alternates between the VUI and an agent during a single call depending on their needs. When this occurs the different voices that result from alternating between the VUI and an agent can be annoying and confusing.
In another scenario, there are occasions when a caller is in conversation with a human agent and is subsequently transferred to a computer system to continue the call. Once the caller is transferred to the computer system, information is related to the caller in a synthesized voice that sounds quite different to that of the human agent that the caller originally spoke to which can also be irritating to the caller. It is desirable, therefore, to have a system wherein the voice heard by a caller is consistent whether the caller is interacting with a human agent or a VUI and whereby switching between the two appears seamless to the caller.
The invention is directed to a VUI that communicates in the same voice through all phases of a telephone call with a caller regardless of whether the caller is first communicating with a human agent and switched to a text to speech system and vice-versa. In an embodiment, the invention is a method of providing a seamless hybrid computer and human call service comprising interacting during a telephone call with at least one of a human agent and a Voice User Interface, the Voice User Interface comprising a Text to Speech (TTS) system by which one of text entered by the agent and computer generated text is converted to speech and transmitted to the human caller; a morphing transformation library containing pre-computed voice parameters unique to agents affiliated with the Voice User Interface; and a switching subsystem for transferring handling of the call between the Voice User Interface and the human agent and wherein when a call is initially handled by verbal interaction with the human agent, the agent's natural voice is heard by the caller and wherein when the call is transferred from the human agent to the Voice User Interface, the text to speech system communicates agent entered text or computer generated interactive data to the caller in a synthesized voice using pre-computed voice transformation parameters unique to the agent who transferred the call and thereby rendering the voice derived from the text to speech system similar to the agent's natural voice and wherein when a call is initially handled by the Voice User Interface, the text to speech system communicates with the caller in a synthesized voice and When the call is transferred to an agent, an agent to computer transformation is applied to the agent's voice using the pre-computed parameters according to the agent ID in the morphing transformation library thereby rendering the agent's voice similar to that initially perceived by the caller.
The present invention performs a morphing transformation in specific instances to either modify the sound of a particular human's voice to make it sound like the voice of a computer that forms part of a VUI system, or make the computer voice sound like the human. There are various techniques that can be applied to morph one voice into another. Morphing can be accomplished by a simple linear pitch shift and format shift for example. Morphing techniques can be applied to the human agent's speech or to the TTS output in a VUI to create a sound that mimics the computer voice and agent's voice respectively. Alternatively the human agent can type his or her answer as text and the TTS system will convert the text to speech in the computer-generated voice.
In one embodiment, there are two main scenarios for operation of the system of the invention. In the first scenario, in an established call, an agent is talking to a caller when at some point during the call, the caller is transferred to a VUI by a switching subsystem.
In the second scenario, in an established call, the caller 140 is initially communicating with a VUI and at some point the caller 140 is transferred to a human agent 120. This scenario is depicted in
In this manner, the invention provides a VUI that communicates in the same voice through all phases of a telephone call with a caller 140 regardless of whether the caller 140 is first communicating with a human agent 120 and switched to a text to speech system 160 or vice-versa.
It should be noted that the embodiment described above is presented as one of several approaches that may be used to embody the invention. It should be understood that the details presented above do not limit the scope of the invention in any way; rather, the appended claims, construed broadly, completely define the scope of the invention.
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