Title :
Effects of duration and formant movement on vowel perception
Author :
Sawusch, James R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Psychol., State Univ. of New York, Buffalo, NY, USA
Abstract :
Acoustical analysis of speech and perceptual studies indicate that the dominant acoustic correlates of vowel perception are the frequencies of the first three formants. However, most vowels are not completely steady-state (even in isolation) and formant frequencies change with variation in the surrounding consonantal context, prosodic influences, speaking rate, and vocal tract length of the talker. In the present studies, both natural and synthetic syllables (“head” and “had”) were used to explore the relative potency of average formant frequencies, vocalic duration, and formant frequency movement in vowel perception. A male talker was identified whose formant frequencies, at the midpoint of the words “had” and “head”, were identical. However, these tokens differed in their voiced duration and movement of the first three formants and were also highly intelligible. Since the formant frequencies at midpoint could not distinguish these two words, listeners were clearly using different/additional information to guide perception. In the first study, vowel duration was varied. Digital waveform editing was used to generate two series, one based on “had” and the other based on “head”. Overall, duration had little effect on listeners´ classification of the stimuli. The second study employed synthetic series in which the formant movements of the first three formants were varied between those of the natural “had” and those of the natural “head”
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; speech processing; acoustic correlates; acoustical analysis; average formant frequencies; digital waveform editing; formant frequency movement effect; listener classification; male talker; natural syllables; series generation; speech; synthetic syllables; vocalic duration effect; voiced duration; vowel duration; vowel perception; Frequency; Natural languages; Psychology; Shape; Speech analysis; Speech processing; Speech recognition; Steady-state;
Conference_Titel :
Spoken Language, 1996. ICSLP 96. Proceedings., Fourth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3555-4
DOI :
10.1109/ICSLP.1996.607316