AAC to NIST Converter

Convert AAC audio to NIST SPHERE format online

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NIST Evaluation Ready

Produce NIST-format audio from AAC for speech evaluation benchmarks and government speech database submissions.

Simple Online Tool

Convert AAC to NIST without installing government speech toolkits — upload, convert, and download.

Server-Side Processing

All encoding happens on our cloud servers, keeping your machine free from speech processing software.

How to convert AAC to NIST

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose nist or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your nist file right afterwards

About formats

AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) is the successor to MP3, standardized by ISO/IEC as part of the MPEG-2 and later MPEG-4 specifications. Designed collaboratively by Fraunhofer, Dolby, Sony, Nokia, and AT&T, AAC delivers superior sound quality at equivalent or lower bit rates — a 96 kbps AAC stream generally matches a 128 kbps MP3 file in perceptual quality. The codec leverages a modified discrete cosine transform combined with advanced psychoacoustic modeling and temporal noise shaping. AAC serves as the default audio format for Apple's ecosystem (iTunes, iPhone, iPad), YouTube, and many streaming services. Its first advantage is excellent compression efficiency — high-fidelity audio using significantly less storage and bandwidth. Second, the format supports sample rates from 8 kHz to 96 kHz and up to 48 channels, suiting everything from voice calls to surround sound. Third, broad industry adoption by Apple and others ensures that virtually every modern device, browser, and media player handles AAC content natively without additional plugins.
Initial release: 1997
NIST SPHERE (SPeech HEader REsources) is a specialized audio file format created by the National Institute of Standards and Technology for speech research, particularly projects funded by DARPA. The format wraps raw audio samples with a structured ASCII header encoding metadata such as sample rate, channel count, encoding type, speaker demographics, and transcription annotations — making it ideal for distributing speech corpora. NIST files typically store uncompressed PCM or mu-law audio at telephone-quality sample rates (8 kHz or 16 kHz), though the container is flexible enough to hold various encodings. A key advantage is the rich self-documenting header that lets researchers embed detailed corpus metadata directly in the file, eliminating sidecar files. SPHERE has also become the de facto standard for major speech databases like TIMIT, Switchboard, and the Fisher corpus, ensuring broad recognition across academic and government labs. The open specification and availability of command-line tools (sphere, h_strip, w_decode) make it straightforward to convert, inspect, and process these files programmatically in speech processing pipelines.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert AAC to NIST?

NIST is a SPHERE-based format used by the National Institute of Standards and Technology for speech evaluation — needed for NIST benchmark submissions.

What handles NIST files?

NIST speech tools, the SPHERE toolkit, Kaldi, SoX, and other speech processing frameworks support the NIST format.

Is NIST the same as SPH?

They are closely related — both use the SPHERE header format. NIST specifically refers to files following NIST speech evaluation standards.

What are typical specifications?

NIST speech files usually contain mono audio at 8 or 16 kHz — matching standard speech recognition pipeline requirements.

Can I batch convert?

Upload several AAC files at once and convert them all to NIST format simultaneously.