Surface electromyographic (EMG) signals were detected from the laryngeal area of 7 normal and 7 vocally hyperfunctional speakers during rest, two resisted-force maneuvers, vowel production, and connected speech. Vowel fundamental frequency, absolute and relative period perturbation, laryngeal-palpation ratings, and harshness ratings were acquired as well. The two groups differed significantly on all EMG measures except those associated with the resisted-force maneuvers, the vowel EMG-to-rest EMG ratio, and the speech EMG-to-rest EMG ratio. Moderately high correlations were evident between selected clinical measures and speech EMG values.
This research was designed to investigate the effects of selected vocal disguises upon speaker identification by listening. The experiment consisted of 360 pair discriminations presented in a fixed-sequence mode. The listeners were asked to decide whether two sentences were uttered by the same or different speakers and to rate their degree of confidence in each decision. The speakers produced two sentence sets utilizing their normal speaking mode and five selected disguises. One member of each stimulus pair in the listening task was always an undisguised speech sample; the other member was either disguised or undisguised. Two listener groups were trained for the task: a naive group of 24 undergraduate students, and a sophisticated group of three doctoral students and three professors of Speech and Hearing Sciences. Both groups of listeners were able to discriminate speakers with a moderately high degree of accuracy (92% correct) when both members of the stimulus pair were undisguised. The inclusion of a disguised speech sample in the stimulus pair significantly interfered with listener performance (59%--81% correct depending upon the particular disguise). These results present a similar pattern to this authors' previous results utilizing spectrographic speaker-identification tasks (Reich et al., 1976).
Miniature accelerometers were used to transduce nasal and anterior-neck tissue vibrations of 12 hypernasal and 3 normal children. The accelerometric voltages provided an analog implementation of Horii's (1980) nasal/voice ratio. Simultaneous audio recordings were later evaluated for hypernasality by listeners. Listeners' direct magnitude estimations (DME) of hypernasality were highly correlated with the accelerometric nasal/voice ratio when the stimulus sentences contained obstruents, nonnasal semivowels, and vowels. No correlation existed between DME and accelerometric values when the stimulus sentences contained primarily nasal semivowels and vowels.
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