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Voice

About: Voice is a(n) research topic. Over the lifetime, 2393 publication(s) have been published within this topic receiving 56637 citation(s).


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[...]

01 Jan 1975
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce articulatory phonetics phonology and phonetic transcription, including the Consonants of English English vowels and English words and sentences, as well as the international phonetic alphabet feature hierarchy performance exercises.
Abstract: Part I Introductory concepts: articulatory phonetics phonology and phonetic transcription. Part II English phonetics: the Consonants of English English vowels English words and sentences. Part III General phonetics: airstream mechanisms and phonation types place and manner of articulation acoustic phonetics vowels and vowel-like articulations syllables and suprasegmental features linguistic phonetics the international phonetic alphabet feature hierarchy performance exercises.

2,749 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

[...]

01 Jan 1964-WORD
TL;DR: A cross-language study of Voicing in Initial Stops: Acoustical Measurements as discussed by the authors was conducted in the early 1960s and the results showed that the initial stops were noisy.
Abstract: (1964). A Cross-Language Study of Voicing in Initial Stops: Acoustical Measurements. WORD: Vol. 20, No. 3, pp. 384-422.

2,230 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

[...]

TL;DR: In this paper, an articulatory analysis of 16 English consonants was performed over voice communication systems with frequency distortion and with random masking noise. The listeners were forced to guess at every sound and a count was made of all the different errors that resulted when one sound was confused with another.
Abstract: Sixteen English consonants were spoken over voice communication systems with frequency distortion and with random masking noise. The listeners were forced to guess at every sound and a count was made of all the different errors that resulted when one sound was confused with another. With noise or low‐pass filtering the confusions fall into consistent patterns, but with high‐pass filtering the errors are scattered quite randomly. An articulatory analysis of these 16 consonants provides a system of five articulatory features or “dimensions” that serve to characterize and distinguish the different phonemes: voicing, nasality, affrication, duration, and place of articulation. The data indicate that voicing and nasality are little affected and that place is severely affected by low‐pass and noisy systems. The indications are that the perception of any one of these five features is relatively independent of the perception of the others, so that it is as if five separate, simple channels were involved rather than a single complex channel.

1,799 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

[...]

TL;DR: Perceptual validation of the relative importance of acoustic cues for signaling a breathy voice quality has been accomplished using a new voicing source model for synthesis of more natural male and female voices.
Abstract: Voice quality variations include a set of voicing sound source modifications ranging from laryngealized to normal to breathy phonation. Analysis of reiterant imitations of two sentences by ten female and six male talkers has shown that the potential acoustic cues to this type of voice quality variation include: (1) increases to the relative amplitude of the fundamental frequency component as open quotient increases; (2) increases to the amount of aspiration noise that replaces higher frequency harmonics as the arytenoids become more separated; (3) increases to lower formant bandwidths; and (4) introduction of extra pole zeros in the vocal-tract transfer function associated with tracheal coupling. Perceptual validation of the relative importance of these cues for signaling a breathy voice quality has been accomplished using a new voicing source model for synthesis of more natural male and female voices. The new formant synthesizer, KLSYN88, is fully documented here. Results of the perception study indicate that, contrary to previous research which emphasizes the importance of increased amplitude of the fundamental component, aspiration noise is perceptually most important. Without its presence, increases to the fundamental component may induce the sensation of nasality in a high-pitched voice. Further results of the acoustic analysis include the observations that: (1) over the course of a sentence, the acoustic manifestations of breathiness vary considerably--tending to increase for unstressed syllables, in utterance-final syllables, and at the margins of voiceless consonants; (2) on average, females are more breathy than males, but there are very large differences between subjects within each gender; (3) many utterances appear to end in a "breathy-laryngealized" type of vibration; and (4) diplophonic irregularities in the timing of glottal periods occur frequently, especially at the end of an utterance. Diplophonia and other deviations from perfect periodicity may be important aspects of naturalness in synthesis.

1,564 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

[...]

TL;DR: Analysis of correct responses and errors showed that consonant features are processed independently, in agreement with the cerebral hemisphere dominant for language.
Abstract: Earlier experiments with dichotically presented nonsense syllables had suggested that perception of the sounds of speech depends upon unilateral processors located in the cerebral hemisphere dominant for language. Our aim in this study was to pull the speech signal apart to test its components in order to determine, if possible, which aspects of the perceptual process depend upon the specific language processing machinery of the dominant hemisphere. The stimuli were spoken consonant‐vowel‐consonant syllables presented in dichotic pairs which contrasted in only one phone (initial stop consonant, final stop consonant, or vowel). Significant right‐ear advantages were found for initial and final stop consonants, nonsignificant right‐ear advantages for six medial vowels, and significant right‐ear advantages for the articulatory features of voicing and place of production in stop consonants. Analysis of correct responses and errors showed that consonant features are processed independently, in agreement with ea...

720 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202153
202069
201981
201888
201762
201668