Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5739390 | Hearing Research | 2017 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
This study explored the effects on speech intelligibility of across-formant differences in fundamental frequency (ÎF0) and F0 contour. Sentence-length speech analogues were presented dichotically (left = F1+F3; right = F2), either alone or-because competition usually reveals grouping cues most clearly-accompanied in the left ear by a competitor for F2 (F2C) that listeners must reject to optimize recognition. F2C was created by inverting the F2 frequency contour. In experiment 1, all left-ear formants shared the same constant F0 and ÎF0F2 was 0 or ±4 semitones. In experiment 2, all left-ear formants shared the natural F0 contour and that for F2 was natural, constant, exaggerated, or inverted. Adding F2C lowered keyword scores, presumably because of informational masking. The results for experiment 1 were complicated by effects associated with the direction of ÎF0F2; this problem was avoided in experiment 2 because all four F0 contours had the same geometric mean frequency. When the target formants were presented alone, scores were relatively high and did not depend on the F0F2 contour. F2C impact was greater when F2 had a different F0 contour from the other formants. This effect was a direct consequence of the associated ÎF0; the F0F2 contour per se did not influence competitor impact.
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Authors
Robert J. Summers, Peter J. Bailey, Brian Roberts,