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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effects of noise on speech production: Acoustic and perceptual analyses

TLDR
The nature of the acoustic changes that taken place when speakers produce speech under adverse conditions such as noise, psychological stress, or high cognitive load are discussed and the role of training and feedback in controlling and modifying a talker's speech to improve performance of current speech recognizers is discussed.
Abstract
Acoustical analyses were carried out on a set of utterances produced by two male speakers talking in quiet and in 80, 90, and 100 dB SPL of masking noise. In addition to replicating previous studies demonstrating increases in amplitude, duration, and vocal pitch while talking in noise, these analyses also found reliable differences in the formant frequencies and short‐term spectra of vowels. Perceptual experiments were also conducted to assess the intelligibility of utterances produced in quiet and in noise when they were presented at equal S/N ratios for identification. In each experiment, utterances originally produced in noise were found to be more intelligible than utterances produced in the quiet. The results of the acoustic analyses showed clear and consistent differences in the acoustic–phonetic characteristics of speech produced in quiet versus noisy environments. Moreover, these acoustic differences produced reliable effects on intelligibility. The findings are discussed in terms of: (1) the nature of the acoustic changes that take place when speakers produce speech under adverse conditions such as noise, psychological stress, or high cognitive load; (2) the role of training and feedback in controlling and modifying a talker’s speech to improve performance of current speech recognizers; and (3) the development of robust algorithms for recognition of speech in noise.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Echoes of echoes? An episodic theory of lexical access.

TL;DR: An episodic model tested against speech production data from a word-shadowing task predicted the shadowing-response-time patterns, and it correctly predicted a tendency for shadowers to spontaneously imitate the acoustic patterns of words and nonwords.
Book ChapterDOI

Acoustic Communication in Noise

TL;DR: This chapter reviews recent advancements in studies of vocal adaptations to interference by background noise and relates these to fundamental issues in sound perception in animals and humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech recognition in adverse conditions: A review

TL;DR: A review of the effects of adverse conditions (ACs) on the perceptual, linguistic, cognitive, and neurophysiological mechanisms underlying speech recognition is presented in this paper, where the authors advocate an approach to speech recognition that includes rather than neutralises complex listening environments and individual differences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interaction between duration, context, and speaking style in English stressed vowels

TL;DR: In this paper, a biomechanically motivated version of the vowel undershoot model was used for English front vowels embedded in a /w-l/ frame and carrying constant main stress.
BookDOI

Laboratory Phonology 7

TL;DR: A collection of recent papers in Laboratory Phonology approaches phonological theory from several different empirical directions as mentioned in this paper, including field work studies providing fresh insights into the structure of phonological features, and the phonology-phonetics interface is investigated in phonetic research involving both segments and prosody.
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