2012
DOI: 10.1121/1.3665997
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Perceptual interaction of the harmonic source and noise in voice

Abstract: Although the amount of inharmonic energy (noise) present in a human voice is an important determinant of vocal quality, little is known about the perceptual interaction between harmonic and inharmonic aspects of the voice source. This paper reports three experiments investigating this issue. Results indicate that perception of the harmonic slope and of noise levels are both influenced by complex interactions between the spectral shape and relative levels of harmonic and noise energy in the voice source. Just-n… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(43 reference statements)
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“…The linguistics literature has typically focused on harmonic attributes of breathiness (e.g., Fischer-Jïrgensen, 1967;Bickley, 1982;Esposito, 2010a), whereas the voice literature usually focuses on the role of noise (e.g., Hillenbrand et al, 1994;Shrivastav and Sapienza, 2006). The results of this study reinforce that both the harmonic and inharmonic components of the voice source, as well as their interaction, must be important in the perception of phonation, and thus that context is important in the interpretation of acoustic cues to voice quality (Kreiman and Gerratt, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…The linguistics literature has typically focused on harmonic attributes of breathiness (e.g., Fischer-Jïrgensen, 1967;Bickley, 1982;Esposito, 2010a), whereas the voice literature usually focuses on the role of noise (e.g., Hillenbrand et al, 1994;Shrivastav and Sapienza, 2006). The results of this study reinforce that both the harmonic and inharmonic components of the voice source, as well as their interaction, must be important in the perception of phonation, and thus that context is important in the interpretation of acoustic cues to voice quality (Kreiman and Gerratt, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…Of course, we are not claiming that noise is not a cue to breathy voice in White Hmong. It is extremely likely that listeners would attend to noise if it were strong, given the known role of noise in English listeners' perception of breathiness and its interaction with spectral slope (Klatt and Klatt, 1990;Kreiman and Gerratt, 2005;Shrivastav and Sapienza, 2006;Kreiman and Gerratt, 2012) and the measured differences in harmonics-to-noise ratio between the breathy and modal tones in Hmong (Garellek, 2012). However, the current study indicates that when the noise level is only intermediate, spectral slope variation alone can control the rate of breathy responses.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 45%
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“…The present study further showed that when vocal folds are symmetrically stiff, as in series I, the major acoustic effect of varying body stiffness was the extent to which the folds excited high-order harmonics in the produced sound spectrum as demonstrated by the strong correlations between body stiffness and the number of harmonics above the noise baseline in the spectrum for that series. Because listeners are perceptually sensitive to changes in the harmonic structure and slopes of harmonic spectra (Kreiman and Gerratt, 2012), the number of harmonics became the single most important acoustic measure that linked physiology (body stiffness) to perception in the symmetric conditions in series I. Although contraction of the cricothyroid muscle also plays a role, the TA muscle is the primary regulator of body layer stiffness (Hirano, 1974).…”
Section: Asymmetric Conditions With a Soft-body Reference Vocal Fomentioning
confidence: 99%