Publication date: July 2017
Source:Journal of Phonetics, Volume 63
Author(s): Santiago Barreda
Spectral information in speech sounds varies as a function of linguistic content, as well as the vocal-tract length (VTL) of the speaker. It is usually considered that human listeners rely on VTL information when assessing apparent speaker-size. However, a recent experiment (Barreda, 2016) found that listeners respond to the specific spectral-content of speech sounds rather than simply responding to speaker VTL information. This results in biases towards identifying certain phonemes with larger speakers independently of VTL information. To investigate this, listeners were asked to judge relative speaker-size based on vowel pairs differing in vowel quality and/or apparent speaker VTL. Additionally, one group of listeners was asked to report relative-height differences, while another group was trained to report relative-VTL differences directly. Results indicate that both groups of listeners exhibited substantial biases towards associating certain phonemes with larger speakers. In addition, listeners showed substantial variation both in their sensitivity to specific acoustic cues, and in their general approach to speaker size estimation. For example, some listeners rely primarily on VTL cues while others rely heavily on phoneme-specific spectral information.
from Speech via a.lsfakia on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2oKeFEZ
via IFTTT
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου