DocumentCode
336953
Title
Some characteristics of speech produced under high G-force and pressure breathing
Author
South, Allan J.
Author_Institution
Syst. Integration Dept, Defence Eval. & Res. Agency, Farnborough, UK
Volume
4
fYear
1999
fDate
15-19 Mar 1999
Firstpage
2095
Abstract
The performance of speech recognisers in a combat aircraft is degraded seriously by the extreme physical stresses to which the crew are subjected. This paper describes measurements of first and second formant frequencies of nine vowels from one speaker recorded under high levels of acceleration, with and without positive pressure breathing. Under acceleration alone, F2 is reduced for high front vowels, while F1 remains constant, but for back and mid vowels, F1 reduces with little change in F2. When positive pressure breathing is introduced, nearly all vowels are affected, and the “vowel triangle” on the F1-F2 plane collapses inwards, towards the neutral vowel position. If these changes are found to be consistent between speakers, it is hoped to develop techniques of voice transformation to reverse them and thus improve the performance of speech recognisers in this harsh environment
Keywords
frequency measurement; military aircraft; pneumodynamics; speech recognition; F1; F2; acceleration; back vowels; combat aircraft; first formant frequency; frequency measurement; high G-force; high front vowels; high pressure breathing; mid vowels; neutral vowel position; physical stresses; positive pressure breathing; second formant frequency; speech recognisers performance; voice transformation; vowel triangle; vowels; Acceleration; Aircraft; Audio recording; Degradation; Frequency measurement; Frequency response; Microphones; Speech analysis; Speech recognition; Stress;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 1999. Proceedings., 1999 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Phoenix, AZ
ISSN
1520-6149
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5041-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICASSP.1999.758346
Filename
758346
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