Text-to-speech in eBooks

Text-to-speech (TTS) uses computer-generated synthetic speech to read out each word. It can also be used to access things like menu options on electronic equipment such as computers. It is commonly available in sat nav systems and railway station announcements.

TTS is built into the Windows and Macintosh computer operating systems, many mobile phones, tablet computers and devices like the iPod touch. Third party TTS applications are available for many systems that do not have one built in.

For most people text-to-speech can be useful, or simply a fun gimmick, but for those who struggle to read the printed word, it can be an essential form of access. It has been used for many years to read electronic documents, websites and emails.

TTS on eBooks

eBook apps

Most electronic files can be read on your computer using text-to-speech software or a screen reader (an advanced TTS system which can also report additional information such as whether text is bolded or a checkbox is checked).

eBooks are simply electronic files, so they are inherently accessible to text-to-speech. However, due to author and publisher concerns over copyright infringement, some eBooks are protected with Digital Rights Management (DRM), which can prevent text-to-speech software from accessing eBook content.

eBook readers

Some eBook readers have text-to-speech features built into them.

However, not all eBooks allow TTS to work, depending on who owns the rights to the book. This is due to concerns that it will adversely affect audio book sales or that it infringes their copyright. RNIB is working hard to ensure that all eBooks have this feature turned on.

For reviews of specific eBook readers and apps, read the accessibility of eBooks section.

TTS v audio books

In comparison to a performed audio book, where a person reads the content, and reflects the emotion and pace of an author's work, text to speech can sound stilted and mechanical. A blind or partially sighted person who is used to text to speech, however, may prefer it precisely because it is not performed, as it allows them to draw their own interpretation from the text.

Someone may prefer either performed audio books or text to speech depending on their individual preferences, the nature of the material they're reading, where they are - for example, at work or at home - and even the time of day.

However, the main advantages of eBooks with text to speech over performed audio books is the availability, ease of access and new titles becoming available much quicker. A large and growing number of new and existing books are made available in eBook format, which may never be made available as audio books. So eBooks that can be read by using text to speech have the potential to greatly increase the number of books available to those who rely on audio formats.

What does TTS sound like?

There is a wide range of synthetic voices available. Each allows you to change the speed to suit your preference, and sometimes choose from a number of different voices, for instance female or male.

The synthetic voice on Amazon's Kindle Keyboard differs greatly to the synthetic voice used on Apple's iPad. RNIB's synthetic voice from IVONA is, we believe, one of the best available, and it sounds very 'natural'. In comparison, the synthetic voice Eloquence that comes with some screen readers can sound 'robotic', but is widely liked by many blind and partially sighted people because it remains intelligible at very high speeds.

Regardless of how 'natural' text to speech can sound, it does not compare to the emotion and performance that an actor can bring to a performed audio book.

Listen to our clips of the synthetic voices used by different eBook readers with an excerpt from the novel 'Treasure Island' by Robert Louis Stephenson:

Last updated: 20 September 2012

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Choosing an eBook reader or app

Read our guide to the accessibility of eBooks for reviews of specific eBook readers and apps. For a general overview of eBooks read our Understanding eBooks page.