Modeling the role of inherent spectral change in vowel identification
- 1 November 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Acoustical Society of America (ASA) in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Vol. 80 (5) , 1297-1308
- https://doi.org/10.1121/1.394433
Abstract
Statistical analysis of F1 and F2 measurements from nucleus and offglide sections of isolated Canadian English vowels shows significant formant frequency change not only for the ‘‘phonetic diphthongs’’ /e/ and /o/, but also for the ‘‘monophthongs’’ /ι/, /q/, and /1/. In a perceptual experiment, brief sections were extracted from ‘‘nucleus’’ and ‘‘offglide’’ portions of naturally produced vowels. Two sections from each vowel were presented to listeners in each of three conditions: (1) natural order (nucleus followed by offglide); (2) repeated nucleus (nucleus followed by itself); and (3) reverse (offglide followed by nucleus). Listeners’ error rates for the natural order condition were comparable to those for unmodified full vowels (averaging 14% and 13%, respectively). Significantly higher error rates were found for the repeated nucleus (32%) and reverse (38%) conditions. Observed confusion matrices were strongly correlated with predictions from a pattern recognition model incorporating the formant measurements. This study provides evidence for the importance of inherent spectral change in listeners’ perception of isolated vowels. In addition, the problem of the parametric representation of formant trajectories is discussed and preliminary evidence for the persistence of vowel-inherent spectral change in consonantal context is presented.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
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