Title :
Detection of laryngeal function using speech and electroglottographic data
Author :
Childers, Donald G. ; Bae, Keun Sung
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Florida Univ., Gainesville, FL, USA
Abstract :
The purpose of this research was to develop quantitative measures for the assessment of laryngeal function using speech and electroglottographic (EGG) data. Two procedures for the detection of laryngeal pathology were developed: (1) a spectral distortion measure using pitch synchronous and asynchronous methods with linear predictive coding (LPC) vectors and vector quantization (VQ), and (2) analysis of the EGG signal using time interval and amplitude difference measures. The VQ procedure was conjectured to offer the possibility of circumventing the need to estimate the glottal volume velocity waveform by inverse filtering techniques. The EGG procedure was to evaluate data that was ´nearly´ a direct measure of vocal fold vibratory motion and thus was conjectured to offer the potential for providing an excellent assessment of laryngeal function. A threshold based procedure gave 75.9 and 69.0% probability of pathological detection using procedures (1) and (2), respectively, for 29 patients with pathological voices and 52 normal subjects. The false alarm probability was 9.6% for the normal subjects.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; biomedical measurement; speech analysis and processing; EEG signal analysis; electroglottographic data; false alarm probability; glottal volume velocity waveform; inverse filtering; linear predictive coding vectors; normal subjects; pathological detection probability; patients with pathological voices; pitch asynchronous methods; pitch synchronous methods; spectral distortion measure; speech data; threshold based procedure; vector quantization; vocal fold vibratory motion; Distortion measurement; Filtering; Linear predictive coding; Motion measurement; Pathology; Signal analysis; Speech; Time measurement; Vector quantization; Vibration measurement; Adult; Aged; Electrodiagnosis; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Female; Glottis; Humans; Laryngeal Diseases; Male; Middle Aged; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Sound Spectrography; Vibration; Voice Disorders;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on