Title of article :
Effects of Low-Pass Filtering on Acoustic Analysis of Voice
Author/Authors :
Julia K. MacCallum، نويسنده , , Aleksandra E. Olszewski، نويسنده , , Yu Zhang، نويسنده , , Jack J. Jiang، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
6
From page :
15
To page :
20
Abstract :
Objective/Hypothesis Low-pass filtering is often applied to eliminate effects of environmental noise when preparing voice recordings for acoustic analysis. This study tested the effects of low-pass filter cutoff frequency on the results of acoustic voice analysis, with a particular interest in the effects of low cutoff frequencies on nonlinear dynamic parameters. Study Design A crossover randomized controlled trial was performed using voice recordings of sustained vowel phonation obtained from the Disordered Voice Database. Methods A second-order Butterworth filter was applied to the voices at cutoff frequencies ranging from 5000 to 40آ Hz. Percent jitter, percent shimmer, fundamental frequency (F0), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), correlation dimension (D2), and second-order entropy (K2) were calculated for each signal. Results Traditional acoustic parameters were validly measured at cutoff frequencies as low as 300آ Hz. The SNR and percent shimmer were improved by cutoff frequencies of 300آ Hz or higher; F0 and percent jitter were unaffected by filtering at these frequencies. D2 and K2 were measured stably for signals filtered at cutoff frequencies as low as 100آ Hz. Conclusion To ensure accuracy in acoustic voice analysis, setting the cutoff frequency of a low-pass filter at least one octave above the F0 (minimum of 300آ Hz) is recommended. Nonlinear dynamic measures of D2 and K2 proved more robust and maintained accuracy at lower frequencies.
Keywords :
Second-order entropy , Filter , Cutoff frequency , Correlation dimension
Journal title :
Journal of Voice
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Journal of Voice
Record number :
1280656
Link To Document :
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