Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6287350 | Hearing Research | 2015 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Sustained vocalizations of vowels [a], [i], and syllable [mÉ] were collected in twenty normal-hearing individuals. On vocalizations, five conditions of different audio-vocal feedback were introduced separately to the speakers including no masking, wearing supra-aural headphones only, speech-noise masking, high-pass noise masking, and broad-band-noise masking. Power spectral analysis of vocal fundamental frequency (F0) was used to evaluate the modulations of F0 and linear-predictive-coding was used to acquire first two formants. The results showed that while the formant frequencies were not significantly shifted, low-frequency modulations (<3Â Hz) of F0 significantly increased with reduced audio-vocal feedback across speech sounds and were significantly correlated with auditory awareness of speakers' own voices. For sustained speech production, the motor speech controls on F0 may depend on a feedback mechanism while articulation should rely more on a feedforward mechanism. Power spectral analysis of F0 might be applied to evaluate audio-vocal control for various hearing and neurological disorders in the future.
Keywords
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Sensory Systems
Authors
Shao-Hsuan Lee, Tzu-Yu Hsiao, Guo-She Lee,