"same Voice, Different Language": An Exploration of Voice-Cloned Translation to Support Non-Native Speakers in Online Meetings
Paper in proceeding, 2026

Cross-lingual meetings have become essential for global collaboration, yet current translation technologies often strip away vocal identity - the unique speaker characteristics that convey nuance and social presence. While generic text-to-speech (TTS) provides basic intelligibility, it creates a disconnect between speakers and their translated voices, potentially undermining engagement and comprehension. This paper investigates whether voice cloning technology can bridge this gap by preserving speaker identity in real-time translation. We present a controlled study comparing four voice conditions in meeting interpretation: original speech, gender-neutral TTS, gender-matched TTS, and voice cloning. Through a within-subjects experiment with 45 participants, we demonstrate that voice cloning significantly reduces mental workload (p <.001) and enhances user experience across pragmatic quality (p <.001), hedonic quality (p <.001), and overall satisfaction (p <.001) compared to traditional TTS. While original speech maintained advantages in naturalness, voice cloning achieved superior intelligibility, social impression, and user preference. Qualitative analysis revealed that participants valued voice cloning for preserving speaker identity and improving conversation tracking in multi-speaker scenarios. Our findings suggest that identity-preserving translation represents a significant advancement for cross-lingual communication systems, offering both cognitive and social benefits. We conclude with design implications for integrating voice cloning into meeting platforms while addressing ethical considerations around consent and transparency.

Mental Workload

Voice Cloning

User Experience

Cross-Lingual Communication

Intelligent User Interfaces

Author

Yong Ma

University of Bergen

Yuchong Zhang

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Peter Andrews

University of Bergen

Zhikun Wu

Linköping University

Stephanie Zubicueta Portales

Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Morten Fjeld

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Interaction Design and Software Engineering

University of Bergen

University of Gothenburg

International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces Proceedings IUI

1742-1759
9798400719844 (ISBN)

2026 ACM International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces, IUI 2026
Paphos, Cyprus,

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Natural Language Processing

Other Engineering and Technologies

Comparative Language Studies and Linguistics

DOI

10.1145/3742413.3789074

More information

Latest update

4/30/2026