                     SPEECH FILING SYSTEM Vs3.30

                 Computer Tools For Speech Research

               Department of Phonetics and Linguistics
                      University College London

Introduction

SFS provides a computing environment for conducting research into
the nature of speech.  It comprises software tools, file and data
formats, subroutine libraries, graphics, standards and special
programming languages.  It performs standard operations such as
acquisition, replay, display and labelling, spectrographic and
formant analysis and fundamental frequency estimation.  It runs
under Unix, DOS and WIN32 environments and is currently running
on Sun, Hewlett-Packard, Masscomp, Alpha, Linux and 486+PC.  SFS
is copyrighted University College London, but is currently
supplied free of charge to research establishments for non-profit
use.  SFS is supplied as is with no warranty or support.

Features

Operating environments:
      MSDOS:     Protected mode 32-bit processors with GNU
                 compiler DJGPP (version 1 or 2)
      WIN32:     Microsoft Visual C, WIN32 API
      Unix:      GNU gcc compiler and X-Windows

Supported Data Acquisition/Replay:
      IBM-PC:    WIN32 Multimedia API
                 SoundBlaster-8, SoundBlaster-16
                 Laryngograph PCLX
                 UCL expansion bus DAC
      Sun:       Standard 8-bit audio, SPARC 16-bit audio
      Masscomp:  AD12F, DA08
      Linux:     Standard audio device
      Unix:      Connects to AudioFile system
                 Networked replay from Unix to PC with Vista
                 Exceed or via special TCP/IP client

Supported Graphics Devices:
      IBM-PC:    WIN32 Graphics API
                 Super VGA cards
      Sun:       Sun Console, SunTools
      Masscomp:  6-plane colour graphics
      Unix:      X-Windows
                 Support for graphical telnet
      Printers:  WIN32 Printer API, Postscript, Epson Stylus Pro
      Files:     Encapsulated Postscript
                 WordPerfect graphics files
                 GIF files

Utilities:
      Create SFS file, list SFS file, display/print SFS file,
      copy/link/remove items in SFS file, dump contents of SFS
      file.

Analysis programs:
      Acquisition and replay, waveform processing, Laryngographic
      processing, fundamental frequency estimation (from SP or
      from LX), formant frequency estimation, formant synthesis,
      spectrographic analysis, filterbank analysis/synthesis,
      resampling, speed/pitch changing, annotation, spectral
      cross-sections, waveform envelope, filtering, signal
      editing, signal alignment.

File formats:
      Import from many different file formats (WAV, AU, AIFF,
      ILS, HTK, etc); save multiple data items in SFS files and
      compare; standard formats for speech, laryngograph trace,
      fundamental period data, fundamental frequency trace,
      annotations, synthesizer data, spectra, spectrograms, LPC
      coefficients, parameter tracks, etc;  export to binary,
      text, WAV, ILS, HTK, ESPS, etc; processing history
      maintained in file.

Subroutine libraries:
      Supports SFS file I/O and dynamic memory allocation for
      data sets; device-independent graphics; standard format
      display of data sets, digital signal processing library.

Special purpose languages:
      SML Speech Measurement Language - interpreted language for
      measuring data in SFS files; SPC Speech Pascal - compiled
      language for waveform manipulation and analysis; C-SPAN -
      compiled language for synthetic speech stimuli generation.

Source

SFS Vs 3.30 is available by anonymous FTP from:
      ftp://pitch.phon.ucl.ac.uk/pub/sfs
Look at FAQ.TXT and INSTALL.TXT for more information.

Our Web page is:
      http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/resource/sfs.htm

Notice that we are unable to service requests for support on this
software.  Bug fixes only may be sent to SFS@phon.ucl.ac.uk;
requests for help may be ignored.

Mark Huckvale
Phonetics and Linguistics
University College London
Gower Street
London WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom

SFS@phon.ucl.ac.uk

1 July 1998