FindArticles FindArticles
  • News
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Science & Health
  • Knowledge Base
FindArticlesFindArticles
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Science & Health
  • Knowledge Base
Follow US
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Write For Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
FindArticles © 2025. All Rights Reserved.
FindArticles > News > Technology

Google’s NotebookLM adds tone controls to AI podcasts

Bill Thompson
Last updated: September 10, 2025 1:45 pm
By Bill Thompson
Technology
6 Min Read
SHARE

In other words, the search giant is just now giving itself a significant usability upgrade for Audio Overviews, its AI-generated podcast-style summaries in NotebookLM: You’re finally able to control the tone and format of the tool’s podcast-style summaries when they’re created from your docs. The new options — Deep Dive, Brief, Critique and Debate — allow users to determine how two virtual hosts would discuss source material, be it dense research packets or class readings, and to select the desired length and voice.

One format for each research task

Audio Audio: Overviews are meant to transform a stack of notes, links and papers into an engaging story you can listen to at home or on the go. With tone controls, they are more than resumes. Deep Dive also encourages hosts to unpack ideas, ask follow-up questions and surface context, all of which is helpful when you’re investigating a new topic or aggregating common elements of various reports into one place. Brief prioritizes speed by breaking down main insights for rapid understanding if you’re in a hurry.

Table of Contents
  • One format for each research task
  • How it fits in NotebookLM
  • Why personalization is critical for AI audio
  • Real-world use cases
  • Competition and guardrails
  • Availability
Google NotebookLM interface with tone controls for AI podcasts

Criticism is intended to help the work itself. It checks for organization, focus, clarity, style and evidence, and can indicate missing angles or weak claims — useful for students and professionals alike, including when they’re prepping memos, proposals or literature reviews. Debate provides the hosts with competing views and allows them to stress-test arguments with the sources you’ve provided, a format that can expose blind spots, identifying instincts rather than reasoning.

Both modes have duration controls, giving users the option of selecting a short briefing before they head into a meeting or a longer session for a commute. Google is also introducing new “synthetic voices”—a response to a popular request for a less robotic, more human-sounding delivery and better voice differences between hosts.

How it fits in NotebookLM

NotebookLM is Google’s research assistant that operates directly on top of your own documents — of Docs, PDFs, slides, images, and even notes — so outputs are contextually grounded on the sources you provide. Audio Overviews curate that material into a scripted conversation between AI hosts, complete with citations. And the new tone controls lie on top of that foundation, granting you the power not just to determine what the system ought to cover, but how the system should set about it.

It follows recent introductions like Video Overviews, which turn mixed media into short visual explainers, and the arrival of standalone mobile apps on Android and iOS. Taken together, these features enable NotebookLM as a multimodal studio for creating not just source-aware summaries but presentations in a variety of disciplines and less as a general chatbot.

Why personalization is critical for AI audio

Podcast-style delivery is a good way to consume materials, although rarely fits all. Knowledge workers frequently require a debate or critical lens to stress-test ideas, whilst students might appreciate a quick brief or a careful deep dive. Empowering users to control tone ensures the output is attuned to the user’s intent—a core tenet that’s becoming increasingly ubiquitous across advanced generative tools.

Timing The timing also has to do with the increasing tentacles of audio. According to Edison Research’s The Infinite Dial 2024, nearly half of Americans hear podcasts every month — a sharp increase from just the last few years. On the business side, the IAB/PwC Podcast Advertising Revenue Study projected American podcast ad revenue to be close to $2.3 billion by 2023, further reflecting the extent to which attention has turned to spoken forms. With synthetic voices rapidly advancing, AI-native shows and personalized briefings are the next frontier in audio, now emerging from novelty to workflow.

Google’s NotebookLM with tone controls for AI podcasts

Real-world use cases

A product team can pipe in research decks and user interviews, generate a Debate for competing interpretations, and then toggle to a Brief for executive alignment. A law clinic might employ Critique to scan drafts for unclear writing and un-memorialized precedent. At the college level, educators might create Deep Dives to curate readings and lecture notes into digestible study sessions for students who are auditory learners.

Accessibility context is important in the case of the new voice options. Different hosts, more distinct prosody, and a more natural rhythm help users to process complex content while users with reading difficulties or working with materials in a second language find it easier to comprehend.

Competition and guardrails

It’s part of a broader trend across the industry: conversational modes in leading chat assistants; tools that translate voices across languages; and expressive text to speech output from specialized providers are raising the bar. Google’s distinction from NotebookLM continues to be its sturdiness as a means of grounding arguments in independently advised sources with clear and inexpungeable references, which may temper the risk of making overconfident but false claims during critique or debate.

That’s going to be important given the degree to which tone controls push the system toward interpretation. Organizations implementing the feature would be wise to bear standard AI risk practices in mind—spot-checking outputs, maintaining provenance of sources, and aligning use with frameworks such as the NIST AI Risk Management Framework—particularly when the summaries may inform action.

Availability

Google says the new formats and more voices are rolling out widely accessible in all of the supported languages. For current NotebookLM users, tone selection is available in the Audio Overview creation flow with the duration and source options. Early impressions are likely to center on how different the modes really _feel_ in practice, and how much the new voices make listening to the voices for longer periods of time more natural feeling.

As long as that promise is fulfilled (though accessibility is not an easy problem to solve), tone-customized Audio Overviews might one day be the normal way many users interact with their work: not just reading notes, but listening to an intelligent, source-aware conversation that happens to have been put together to accomplish the task at hand.

Bill Thompson
ByBill Thompson
Bill Thompson is a veteran technology columnist and digital culture analyst with decades of experience reporting on the intersection of media, society, and the internet. His commentary has been featured across major publications and global broadcasters. Known for exploring the social impact of digital transformation, Bill writes with a focus on ethics, innovation, and the future of information.
Latest News
Pixel Camera Now Requires Play Services to Function Due to a Font
Redwood Materials Gets $350M For Energy Storage
Bring on the Gemini Integration With YouTube Music
Indiegogo’s Redesign Causes Widespread Breakage
Best Dell Laptop And Desktop Deals For October
YouTube Shorts Gets Daily Time Limit Control
Wait For The GrapheneOS Phone Or Buy A Pixel
ChatGPT Voice Mode Close to Main Chat Integration
Apple Pulls Tea Dating Apps After Privacy Scandal
Atlas Browser Gets Jump on Gemini in Chrome Challenge
ASUS TUF GeForce RTX Deal Saves You $150 at Newegg
Anker Solix C300 Portable Power Station—$90 Off
FindArticles
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Write For Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Corrections Policy
  • Diversity & Inclusion Statement
  • Diversity in Our Team
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Feedback & Editorial Contact Policy
FindArticles © 2025. All Rights Reserved.