EP0750778A1 - Speech synthesis - Google Patents
Speech synthesisInfo
- Publication number
- EP0750778A1 EP0750778A1 EP95911420A EP95911420A EP0750778A1 EP 0750778 A1 EP0750778 A1 EP 0750778A1 EP 95911420 A EP95911420 A EP 95911420A EP 95911420 A EP95911420 A EP 95911420A EP 0750778 A1 EP0750778 A1 EP 0750778A1
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- speech
- pitch
- excitation
- windows
- signal
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L13/00—Speech synthesis; Text to speech systems
- G10L13/08—Text analysis or generation of parameters for speech synthesis out of text, e.g. grapheme to phoneme translation, prosody generation or stress or intonation determination
- G10L13/10—Prosody rules derived from text; Stress or intonation
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L13/00—Speech synthesis; Text to speech systems
- G10L13/02—Methods for producing synthetic speech; Speech synthesisers
- G10L13/04—Details of speech synthesis systems, e.g. synthesiser structure or memory management
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L21/00—Speech or voice signal processing techniques to produce another audible or non-audible signal, e.g. visual or tactile, in order to modify its quality or its intelligibility
- G10L21/02—Speech enhancement, e.g. noise reduction or echo cancellation
- G10L21/0208—Noise filtering
- G10L21/0264—Noise filtering characterised by the type of parameter measurement, e.g. correlation techniques, zero crossing techniques or predictive techniques
Definitions
- the present invention is concerned with the automated generation of speech (for example from a coded text input). More particularly it concerns analysis-synthesis methods where the "synthetic" speech is generated from stored speech waveforms derived originally from a human speaker (as opposed to “synthesis by rule” systems). In order to produce natural-sounding speech it is necessary to produce, in the synthetic speech, the same kind of context-dependent (prosodic) variation of intonation that occurs in human speech. This invention presupposes the generation of prosodic information defining variations of pitch that are to be made, and addresses the problem of processing speech signals to achieve such pitch variation.
- a waveform portion to be used is divided into overlapping segments using a Hamming window having a length equal to three times the pitch period.
- a global spectral envelope is obtained for the waveform, and a short term spectral envelope obtained using a Discrete Fourier transform; a "source component" is obtained which is the short term spectrum divided by the spectral envelope.
- the source component then has its pitch modified by a linear interpolation process and it is then recombined with the envelope information. After preprocessing in this way the segments are concatenated by an overlap-add process to give a desired fundamental pitch.
- time-domain overlap- add process may be applied to an excitation component, for example by using PC analysis to produce a residual- signal (or a parametric representation of it) and applying the overlap-add process to the residual prior to passing it through an LPC synthesis filter (see “Pitch-synchronous Waveform Processing Techniques for Text-to Speech Synthesis using Diphones", F. Charpentier and E. Moulines, European Conference on Speech Communications and Technology, Paris, 1989, vol. II, pp. 13-19).
- FIG. 1 The basic principle of the overlap-add process is shown in Figure 1 where a speech signal S is shown with pitch marks P centred on the excitation peaks; it is separated into overlapping segments by multiplication by windowing waveforms W (only two of which are shown).
- the synthesised waveform is generated by adding the segments together with time shifting to raise or lower the pitch with a segment being respectively occasionally omitted or repeated.
- a speech synthesis apparatus including means controllable to vary the pitch of speech signals synthesised thereby, having:
- the windows consist of first windows, one per pitch period, employing the timing mark portions and a plurality of intermediate windows, and the intermediate windows each have a width less than that of the first windows.
- the invention provides a speech synthesis apparatus including means controllable to vary the pitch of speech signals synthesised thereby, having:
- (iii) means for recombining the spectral and excitation components wherein the multiplying means employs at least two windows per pitch period, each having a duration of less than one pitch period.
- the compression/expansion means is operable in response to timing mark information corresponding at least approximately to instants of vocal excitation to vary the degree of compression/expansion synchronously therewith such that the excitation signal is compressed/expanded less in the vicinity of the timing marks than it is in the centre of the pitch period between two consecutive such marks.
- Figure 2 is a block diagram of one form of synthesis apparatus according to the invention.
- Figures 3 and 5 are timing diagrams illustrating two methods of overlap-add pitch adjustment; and Figure 4 is a timing diagram showing windowing of a speech signal for the purposes of spectral analysis.
- portions of digital speech waveform S are stored in a store 100, each with corresponding pitchmark timing information P, as explained earlier.
- Waveform portions are read out under control of a text-to-speech driver 101 which produces the necessary store addresses; the operation of the driver 101 is conventional and it will not be described further except to note that it also produces pitch information PP.
- the excitation and vocal tract components of a waveform portion read out from the store 100 are separated by an LPC analysis unit 102 which periodically produces the coefficients of a synthesis filter having a frequency response resembling the frequency spectrum of the speech waveform portion.
- This drives an analysis filter 103 which is the inverse of the synthesis filter and produces at its output a residual signal R.
- the LPC analysis and inverse filtering operation is synchronous with the pitchmarks P, as will be described below.
- the next step in the process is that of modifying the pitch of the residual signal.
- This is (for voiced speech segments) performed by a multiple-window method in which the residual is separated into segments in a processing unit 104 by multiplying by a series of overlapping window functions, at least two per pitch period; five are shown in Figure 3, which shows one trapezoidal window centred on the pitch period and four intermediate triangular windows.
- the pitch period windows are somewhat wider than the intermediate ones to avoid duplication of the main excitation when lowering the pitch.
- the windowed segments are added together, but with a reduced temporal spacing, as shown in the lower part of Figure 3; if the pitch is lowered, the temporal spacing is increased.
- the relative window widths are chosen to give overlap of the sloping flanks (i. e. 50% overlap on the intermediate windows) during synthesis to ensure the correct signal amplitude.
- the temporal adjustment is controlled by the signals PP. Typical widths for the intermediate windows are 2 ms whilst the width of the windows located on the pitch marks will depend on the pitch period of the particular signal but is likely to be in the range 2 to 10ms. The use of multiple windows is thought to reduce phase distortion compared with the use of one window per pitch period.
- the residual is passed to an LPC filter 105 to re-form the desired speech signal.
- the store 100 also contains a voiced/unvoiced indicator for each waveform portion, and unvoiced portions are processed .by a pitch unit 104' identical to the unit 104, but bypassing the LPC analysis and synthesis. Switching between the two paths is controlled at 106. Alternatively, the unvoiced portions could follow the same route as the voiced ones; in either case, arbitrary positions are taken for the pitch marks.
- Linear interpolation is not ideal for resampling, but is simple to implement and should at least give an indication of how useful the technique could be.
- the signal When downsampling to reduce the pitch period, the signal must be low-pass filtered to avoid aliasing. Initially, a separate filter has been designed for each pitch period using the window design method. Eventually, these could be generated by table lookup to reduce computation.
- the resampling factor varies smoothly over the segment to be processed to avoid a sharp change in signal characteristics at the boundaries. Without this, the effective sampling rate of the signal would undergo step changes.
- a sinusoidal function is used, and the degree of smoothing is controllable.
- the variable resampling is implemented in the mapping process according to the following equation:
- M number of samples of original signal
- N number of samples of new signal
- ⁇ [0, 1J controls the degree of smoothing
- T(n) position of the n' th sample of the resampled signal.
- a major difference between this and single window overlap-add is that the change in pitch period is achieved without overlap-add of time-shifted segments, provided that the synthesis pitchmarks are mapped to consecutive analysis pitchmarks. If the pitchmarks are not consecutive, overlap-add is still required to give a smooth signal after resampling. This occurs when periods are duplicated or omitted to give the required duration.
- An alternative implementation involves resampling of the whole signal rather than a selected part of each pitch period. This presents no problems for pitch raising provided that appropriate filtering is applied to prevent aliasing, since the harmonic structure still occupies the whole frequency range. When lowering pitch, however, interpolation leaves a gap at the high end of the spectrum.
- this is synchronous with the pitch markings. More particularly, one set of LPC parameters is required for each pitchmark in the speech signal. As part of the speech modification process, a mapping is performed between original and modified pitchmarks. The appropriate LPC parameters can then be selected for each modified pitchmark to resynthesise speech from the residual.
- LPC parameters are interpolated at the speech sampling rate in both analysis and synthesis phases.
- each set of LPC parameters would be obtained for a section of the speech portion (analysis frame) of length equal to the pitch period (centred on the midpoint of the pitch period rather than on the pitch mark), or alternatively longer, overlapping sections might be used which has the advantage of permitting the use of an analysis frame of fixed length according to pitch.
- a windowed analysis frame is preferred, as shown in Figure 4.
- the frames in Figure 4 are shown with a triangular window for clarity, the choice of window function actually depends on the analysis method used.
- a Hanning window might be used.
- the frame centre is aligned with the centre of the pitch period, rather than the pitchmark. The purpose of this is to reduce the influence of glottal excitation on the LPC analysis without resorting to closed-phase analysis with short frames.
- each parameter set is referenced to the period centre rather than the pitchmark.
- the frame length is fixed, as this was found to give more consistent results than a pitch-dependent value.
- the stabilised covariance method would be preferable in terms of accuracy.
- the autocorrelation method is preferred as it is computationally efficient and guaranteed to give a stable synthesis filter.
- the next step is to inverse filter the speech on a pitch-synchronous basis.
- the parameters are interpolated to minimise transients due to large changes in parameter values at frame boundaries.
- the filter corresponds exactly to that obtained from the analysis.
- the filter is a weighted combination of the two filters obtained from the analysis.
- the interpolation is applied directly to the filter coefficients. This has been shown to produce less spectral distortion than other parameters (LAR' s, LSP' s etc), but is not guaranteed to give a stable interpolated filter. No instability problems have been encountered practice.
- ⁇ n is the value of a weighting function at sample n. a
- a r represent the parameter sets referenced to the nearest left and right period centres.
- the filter coefficients for the re-synthesis filter 105 are calculated in the same way as for inverse filtering. Modifications to pitch and durations mean that the sequence of filters and the period values will be different from those used in the analysis, but the interpolation still ensures a smooth variation in filter coefficients from sample-to-sample. For the first pitchmark in a voiced segment, filtering starts at the pitchmark and no interpolation is applied until the period centre is reached. For the last pitchmark in a voiced segment, the period is assumed to be the maximum allowed value for the purposes of positioning the analysis frame, and filtering stops at the pitchmark. These filtering conditions apply to both analysis and re- synthesis. When re-synthesising from the first pitchmark, the filter memory is initialised from preceding signal samples.
- a single-window overlap-add process may be used, with however a window width of less than two pitch period duration (preferably less than 1.7 e. g. in the range 1.25 - 1.6).
- the window function necessarily has a flat top, moreover it is preferably asymmetrically located relative to the pitch marks (preferably embracing a complete period between two pitchmarks).
- a typical window function is shown in Figure 5, with a flat top having a length equal to the synthesis pitch period and flanks of raised half-cosine or linear shape.
- This form of window is beneficial because a smaller temporal portion of the signal is constructed by the overlap-add process than with a longer window, and the asymmetric form places the overlap-add distortion towards the end of the pitch period where the speech energy is lower than immediately after the glottal excitation.
- Use of the resampling and multi-window pitch control is envisaged (as shown in Figure 2) as operating on the residual signal (to avoid distortion of the formants), however, the short asymmetric window method may also be employed without separation of the spectrum end excitation, but directly on the speech signal, in which case the analysis unit 102 and filters 103, 105 of Figure 2 would be omitted, the speech signals from the store 100 being fed directly to the pitch units 104, 104' .
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Computational Linguistics (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Audiology, Speech & Language Pathology (AREA)
- Human Computer Interaction (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
- Multimedia (AREA)
- Compression, Expansion, Code Conversion, And Decoders (AREA)
- Electrophonic Musical Instruments (AREA)
- Measurement Of Mechanical Vibrations Or Ultrasonic Waves (AREA)
- Signal Processing Not Specific To The Method Of Recording And Reproducing (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
SG1996003308A SG43076A1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1994-03-18 | Speech synthesis |
EP95911420A EP0750778B1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1995-03-17 | Speech synthesis |
Applications Claiming Priority (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
EP94301953 | 1994-03-18 | ||
EP94301953 | 1994-03-18 | ||
SG1996003308A SG43076A1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1994-03-18 | Speech synthesis |
PCT/GB1995/000588 WO1995026024A1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1995-03-17 | Speech synthesis |
EP95911420A EP0750778B1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1995-03-17 | Speech synthesis |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP0750778A1 true EP0750778A1 (en) | 1997-01-02 |
EP0750778B1 EP0750778B1 (en) | 2000-10-11 |
Family
ID=26136991
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
EP95911420A Expired - Lifetime EP0750778B1 (en) | 1994-03-18 | 1995-03-17 | Speech synthesis |
Country Status (10)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP0750778B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JPH09510554A (en) |
CN (1) | CN1144008A (en) |
AU (1) | AU692238B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2185134C (en) |
DE (1) | DE69519086T2 (en) |
ES (1) | ES2152390T3 (en) |
NZ (1) | NZ282012A (en) |
SG (1) | SG43076A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1995026024A1 (en) |
Families Citing this family (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
JP3093113B2 (en) * | 1994-09-21 | 2000-10-03 | 日本アイ・ビー・エム株式会社 | Speech synthesis method and system |
DE69509555T2 (en) * | 1994-11-25 | 1999-09-02 | Fink | METHOD FOR CHANGING A VOICE SIGNAL BY MEANS OF BASIC FREQUENCY MANIPULATION |
EP1019906B1 (en) * | 1997-01-27 | 2004-06-16 | Entropic Research Laboratory Inc. | A system and methodology for prosody modification |
WO2013139038A1 (en) * | 2012-03-23 | 2013-09-26 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Speech signal processing method and apparatus and hearing aid using the same |
JP6446993B2 (en) * | 2014-10-20 | 2019-01-09 | ヤマハ株式会社 | Voice control device and program |
Family Cites Families (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5163110A (en) * | 1990-08-13 | 1992-11-10 | First Byte | Pitch control in artificial speech |
-
1994
- 1994-03-18 SG SG1996003308A patent/SG43076A1/en unknown
-
1995
- 1995-03-17 WO PCT/GB1995/000588 patent/WO1995026024A1/en active IP Right Grant
- 1995-03-17 ES ES95911420T patent/ES2152390T3/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1995-03-17 CA CA002185134A patent/CA2185134C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1995-03-17 EP EP95911420A patent/EP0750778B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1995-03-17 JP JP7524461A patent/JPH09510554A/en not_active Ceased
- 1995-03-17 NZ NZ282012A patent/NZ282012A/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1995-03-17 DE DE69519086T patent/DE69519086T2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1995-03-17 AU AU18995/95A patent/AU692238B2/en not_active Ceased
- 1995-03-17 CN CN95192141A patent/CN1144008A/en active Pending
Non-Patent Citations (1)
Title |
---|
See references of WO9526024A1 * |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
CA2185134A1 (en) | 1995-09-28 |
CA2185134C (en) | 2001-04-24 |
DE69519086T2 (en) | 2001-05-10 |
SG43076A1 (en) | 1997-10-17 |
DE69519086D1 (en) | 2000-11-16 |
JPH09510554A (en) | 1997-10-21 |
CN1144008A (en) | 1997-02-26 |
WO1995026024A1 (en) | 1995-09-28 |
ES2152390T3 (en) | 2001-02-01 |
EP0750778B1 (en) | 2000-10-11 |
AU1899595A (en) | 1995-10-09 |
AU692238B2 (en) | 1998-06-04 |
NZ282012A (en) | 1997-05-26 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
Stylianou | Applying the harmonic plus noise model in concatenative speech synthesis | |
Charpentier et al. | Pitch-synchronous waveform processing techniques for text-to-speech synthesis using diphones. | |
Moulines et al. | Time-domain and frequency-domain techniques for prosodic modification of speech | |
US5787398A (en) | Apparatus for synthesizing speech by varying pitch | |
Moulines et al. | Pitch-synchronous waveform processing techniques for text-to-speech synthesis using diphones | |
Moulines et al. | Non-parametric techniques for pitch-scale and time-scale modification of speech | |
US8706496B2 (en) | Audio signal transforming by utilizing a computational cost function | |
EP0993674B1 (en) | Pitch detection | |
EP1454312B1 (en) | Method and system for real time speech synthesis | |
JPH03501896A (en) | Processing device for speech synthesis by adding and superimposing waveforms | |
EP0813184B1 (en) | Method for audio synthesis | |
Stylianou et al. | Diphone concatenation using a harmonic plus noise model of speech. | |
JP2002515610A (en) | Speech coding based on determination of noise contribution from phase change | |
Cabral et al. | Pitch-synchronous time-scaling for prosodic and voice quality transformations. | |
Serra | Introducing the phase vocoder | |
KR100457414B1 (en) | Speech synthesis method, speech synthesizer and recording medium | |
O'Brien et al. | Concatenative synthesis based on a harmonic model | |
JPH08254993A (en) | Voice synthesizer | |
EP0750778B1 (en) | Speech synthesis | |
Bonada | High quality voice transformations based on modeling radiated voice pulses in frequency domain | |
US7822599B2 (en) | Method for synthesizing speech | |
Edgington et al. | Residual-based speech modification algorithms for text-to-speech synthesis | |
US5911170A (en) | Synthesis of acoustic waveforms based on parametric modeling | |
KR100417092B1 (en) | Method for synthesizing voice | |
Gigi et al. | A mixed-excitation vocoder based on exact analysis of harmonic components |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PUAI | Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012 |
|
17P | Request for examination filed |
Effective date: 19960905 |
|
AK | Designated contracting states |
Kind code of ref document: A1 Designated state(s): BE CH DE DK ES FR GB IT LI NL SE |
|
GRAG | Despatch of communication of intention to grant |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA |
|
17Q | First examination report despatched |
Effective date: 19990312 |
|
GRAG | Despatch of communication of intention to grant |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA |
|
GRAG | Despatch of communication of intention to grant |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA |
|
GRAH | Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA |
|
RIC1 | Information provided on ipc code assigned before grant |
Free format text: 7G 10L 13/02 A |
|
GRAH | Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA |
|
GRAA | (expected) grant |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009210 |
|
AK | Designated contracting states |
Kind code of ref document: B1 Designated state(s): BE CH DE DK ES FR GB IT LI NL SE |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: CH Ref legal event code: EP |
|
REF | Corresponds to: |
Ref document number: 69519086 Country of ref document: DE Date of ref document: 20001116 |
|
ITF | It: translation for a ep patent filed | ||
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: DK Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF FAILURE TO SUBMIT A TRANSLATION OF THE DESCRIPTION OR TO PAY THE FEE WITHIN THE PRESCRIBED TIME-LIMIT Effective date: 20010111 |
|
ET | Fr: translation filed | ||
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: CH Ref legal event code: NV Representative=s name: JACOBACCI & PERANI S.A. |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: ES Ref legal event code: FG2A Ref document number: 2152390 Country of ref document: ES Kind code of ref document: T3 |
|
PLBE | No opposition filed within time limit |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009261 |
|
STAA | Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent |
Free format text: STATUS: NO OPPOSITION FILED WITHIN TIME LIMIT |
|
26N | No opposition filed | ||
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: GB Ref legal event code: IF02 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: CH Payment date: 20030214 Year of fee payment: 9 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: BE Payment date: 20030305 Year of fee payment: 9 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: LI Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20040331 Ref country code: CH Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20040331 Ref country code: BE Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20040331 |
|
BERE | Be: lapsed |
Owner name: BRITISH *TELECOMMUNICATIONS P.L.C. Effective date: 20040331 |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: CH Ref legal event code: PL |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: ES Payment date: 20080325 Year of fee payment: 14 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: SE Payment date: 20080218 Year of fee payment: 14 Ref country code: NL Payment date: 20080214 Year of fee payment: 14 Ref country code: IT Payment date: 20080216 Year of fee payment: 14 |
|
EUG | Se: european patent has lapsed | ||
NLV4 | Nl: lapsed or anulled due to non-payment of the annual fee |
Effective date: 20091001 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: NL Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20091001 |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: ES Ref legal event code: FD2A Effective date: 20090318 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: ES Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20090318 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: IT Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20090317 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: SE Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20090318 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: FR Payment date: 20120403 Year of fee payment: 18 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: DE Payment date: 20120323 Year of fee payment: 18 |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: FR Ref legal event code: ST Effective date: 20131129 |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: DE Ref legal event code: R119 Ref document number: 69519086 Country of ref document: DE Effective date: 20131001 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: DE Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20131001 Ref country code: FR Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF NON-PAYMENT OF DUE FEES Effective date: 20130402 |
|
PGFP | Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: GB Payment date: 20140319 Year of fee payment: 20 |
|
REG | Reference to a national code |
Ref country code: GB Ref legal event code: PE20 Expiry date: 20150316 |
|
PG25 | Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo] |
Ref country code: GB Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF EXPIRATION OF PROTECTION Effective date: 20150316 |