Title :
Fundamental frequency of child-directed speech using automatic speech recognition
Author :
VanDam, Mark ; De Palma, Paul
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Speech & Hearing Sci., Washington State Univ., Spokane, WA, USA
Abstract :
It has long been recognized that speech directed to infants and toddlers - child-directed speech (CDS) or motherese - is characterized by a collection of features including hyperarticulation, a distinctive lexicon, reduced structural complexity, and increased fundamental frequency (f0). This paper examines f0 in nearly 500 hours of recordings from 33 families, showing that mothers, but not fathers, distinguish CDS with consistently higher f0. We also found that, compared with parents of typically-developing children, parents of children who are hard-of-hearing do not differ in production of f0 to their children. Results are relevant for improved ASR application and better understanding of mothers´ and fathers´ speech to their children.
Keywords :
speech recognition; CDS; automatic speech recognition; child-directed speech; distinctive lexicon; fundamental frequency; hyperarticulation; improved ASR application; reduced structural complexity; Acoustics; Auditory system; Pediatrics; Production; Software; Speech; Speech recognition; LENA; automatic speech recognition; child directed speech; motherese;
Conference_Titel :
Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS), 2014 Joint 7th International Conference on and Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS), 15th International Symposium on
DOI :
10.1109/SCIS-ISIS.2014.7044876