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Voice

About: Voice is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2393 publications have been published within this topic receiving 56637 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that the French subjects gave greater weight to release burst information because stops are usually released in the word-final position of French words, while the English subjects gave less weight.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that the adaptation effects are partly attributable to the presence or absence of the formant transitions after voicing onset, rather than to VOT per se, and the present results may be attributable to adaptation of a detector sensitive to a weighted combination of the two hypothetical cues of VOT and the duration of voiced transitions.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper showed that Progressive Voicing Assimilation is characteristically restricted to the interword environment (i.e. it occurs at the WORD level) and is the consequence of WORD-faithfulness.
Abstract: This paper proposes that differences in the direction of application of phonological rules can be attributed to the differences in the observed patterns of faithfulness at the WORD and ROOT-levels. Using data from English and Dutch I show that Progressive Voicing Assimilation is characteristically restricted to the inter-word environment (i.e. it occurs at the WORD-level) and is the consequence of WORD-faithfulness. I consider whether the same kind of faithfulness effect can account for assymetrical patterns observed with other phonological processes such as vowel harmony, vowel elision and nasal place assimilation

33 citations

30 Jul 2011
TL;DR: The authors describes modifications to acoustic speech signals produced by speakers with dysarthria in order to make those utterances more intelligible to typical listeners, including the correction of tempo, the adjustment of formant frequencies in sonorants, the removal of aberrant voicing, the deletion of phoneme insertion errors, and the replacement of erroneously dropped phonemes.
Abstract: This paper describes modifications to acoustic speech signals produced by speakers with dysarthria in order to make those utterances more intelligible to typical listeners. These modifications include the correction of tempo, the adjustment of formant frequencies in sonorants, the removal of aberrant voicing, the deletion of phoneme insertion errors, and the replacement of erroneously dropped phonemes. Through simple evaluations of intelligibility with naive listeners, we show that the correction of phoneme errors results in the greatest increase in intelligibility and is therefore a desirable mechanism for the eventual creation of augmentative application software for individuals with dysarthria.

33 citations

Book
01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: In this article, Connell and Amalia Arvanti present an acoustic and electropalatographic study of lexical and postlexical palatalization in American English.
Abstract: 1. Introduction Bruce Connell and Amalia Arvanti Part I. Features and Perception: 2. Intermediate properties in the perception of distinctive feature values John Kingston and Randy L. Diehl 3. A double weak view of trading relations: comments on Kingston and Diehl Terrance M. Nearey 4. Speech perception and lexical representations: the role of vowel nasalization in Hindi and English John J. Ohala and Manjari Ohala 5. Processing versus representation: comments on Ohala and Ohala James M. McQueen 6. On the status of redundant features: the case of backing and rounding Kenneth De Jong 7. The perceptual basis of some sound patterns John J. Ohala Part II. Prosody: 8. Stress shift: do speakers do it or do listeners hear it? Esther Grabe and Paul Warren 9. The phonology and phonetics of the rhythm rule Irene Vogel, Timothy Bunnell, and Steven Hoskins 10. The importance of phonological transcription in empirical approaches to 'stress shift' versus 'early accent': comments on Grabe and Warren, and Vogel, Bunnell and Hoskins Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel 11. Perceptual evidence for the mora in Japanese Haruo Kubozono 12. On blending and the mora: comments on Kubozono Mary E. Beckman 13. Toward a theory of phonological and phonetic timing: evidence from Bantu Kathleen Hubbard 14. On phonetic evidence for the phonological mora: comments on Hubbard Bernard Tranel Part III. Articulatory Organization: 15. Prosodic patterns in the coordination of vowel and consonant gestures Caroline L. Smith 16. 'Where' is timing?: comments on Smith Richard Ogden 17. Asymmetrical prosodic effects on the laryngeal gesture in Korean Sun-Ah Jun 18. On a gestural account of lenis stop voicing in Korean: comments on Jun Gerard J. Docherty 19. A production and perceptual account of palatalization Daniel Recasens, Jordi Fontdevilla, and Maria Dolors Palleres 20. An acoustic and electropalatographic study of lexical and postlexical palatalization in American English Elizabeth C. Zsiga 21. What do we do when phonology is powerful enough to imitate phonetics: comments on Zsiga James M. Scobbie 22. The influence of syntactic structure on [s] to [ ] assimilation Tara Holst and Francis Nolan 23. Assimilation as gestural overlap: comments on Holst and Nolan Catherine P. Browman 24. Orals, gutturals and the jaw Sook-Hang Lee 25. The role of the jaw - active or passive?: comments on Lee Francis Nolan 26. The phonetics and phonology of glottalized consonants in Lendu Didier Demolin 27. Lendu consonants and the role of overlapping gestures in sound change: comments on Demolin Louis Goldstein Indexes.

33 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023102
2022248
202156
202073
201981
201888