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Main Authors: Sigurgeirsson, Atli, Ungless, Eddie L.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.07504
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author Sigurgeirsson, Atli
Ungless, Eddie L.
author_facet Sigurgeirsson, Atli
Ungless, Eddie L.
contents Modern voice cloning models claim to be able to capture a diverse range of voices. We test the ability of a typical pipeline to capture the style known colloquially as "gay voice" and notice a homogenisation effect: synthesised speech is rated as sounding significantly "less gay" (by LGBTQ+ participants) than its corresponding ground-truth for speakers with "gay voice", but ratings actually increase for control speakers. Loss of "gay voice" has implications for accessibility. We also find that for speakers with "gay voice", loss of "gay voice" corresponds to lower similarity ratings. However, we caution that improving the ability of such models to synthesise ``gay voice'' comes with a great number of risks. We use this pipeline as a starting point for a discussion on the ethics of modelling queer voices more broadly. Collecting "clean" queer data has safety and fairness ramifications, and the resulting technology may cause harms from mockery to death.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2406_07504
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Just Because We Camp, Doesn't Mean We Should: The Ethics of Modelling Queer Voices
Sigurgeirsson, Atli
Ungless, Eddie L.
Computation and Language
Modern voice cloning models claim to be able to capture a diverse range of voices. We test the ability of a typical pipeline to capture the style known colloquially as "gay voice" and notice a homogenisation effect: synthesised speech is rated as sounding significantly "less gay" (by LGBTQ+ participants) than its corresponding ground-truth for speakers with "gay voice", but ratings actually increase for control speakers. Loss of "gay voice" has implications for accessibility. We also find that for speakers with "gay voice", loss of "gay voice" corresponds to lower similarity ratings. However, we caution that improving the ability of such models to synthesise ``gay voice'' comes with a great number of risks. We use this pipeline as a starting point for a discussion on the ethics of modelling queer voices more broadly. Collecting "clean" queer data has safety and fairness ramifications, and the resulting technology may cause harms from mockery to death.
title Just Because We Camp, Doesn't Mean We Should: The Ethics of Modelling Queer Voices
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.07504