Literature DB >> 21820272

Automatic intelligibility assessment of speakers after laryngeal cancer by means of acoustic modeling.

Tobias Bocklet1, Korbinian Riedhammer, Elmar Nöth, Ulrich Eysholdt, Tino Haderlein.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: One aspect of voice and speech evaluation after laryngeal cancer is acoustic analysis. Perceptual evaluation by expert raters is a standard in the clinical environment for global criteria such as overall quality or intelligibility. So far, automatic approaches evaluate acoustic properties of pathologic voices based on voiced/unvoiced distinction and fundamental frequency analysis of sustained vowels. Because of the high amount of noisy components and the increasing aperiodicity of highly pathologic voices, a fully automatic analysis of fundamental frequency is difficult. We introduce a purely data-driven system for the acoustic analysis of pathologic voices based on recordings of a standard text.
METHODS: Short-time segments of the speech signal are analyzed in the spectral domain, and speaker models based on this information are built. These speaker models act as a clustered representation of the acoustic properties of a person's voice and are thus characteristic for speakers with different kinds and degrees of pathologic conditions. The system is evaluated on two different data sets with speakers reading standardized texts. One data set contains 77 speakers after laryngeal cancer treated with partial removal of the larynx. The other data set contains 54 totally laryngectomized patients, equipped with a Provox shunt valve. Each speaker was rated by five expert listeners regarding three different criteria: strain, voice quality, and speech intelligibility. RESULTS/
CONCLUSION: We show correlations for each data set with r and ρ≥0.8 between the automatic system and the mean value of the five raters. The interrater correlation of one rater to the mean value of the remaining raters is in the same range. We thus assume that for selected evaluation criteria, the system can serve as a validated objective support for acoustic voice and speech analysis.
Copyright © 2012 The Voice Foundation. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21820272     DOI: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2011.04.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Voice        ISSN: 0892-1997            Impact factor:   2.009


  3 in total

1.  [Validation of an automatic speech analysis in children with isolated cleft palate].

Authors:  A Schulz; T Bocklet; U Eysholdt; C Bohr; M Döllinger; A Ziethe
Journal:  HNO       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 1.284

2.  Toward clinical application of landmark-based speech analysis: Landmark expression in normal adult speech.

Authors:  Keiko Ishikawa; Joel MacAuslan; Suzanne Boyce
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 1.840

Review 3.  Outcome measurements after oral cancer treatment: speech and speech-related aspects--an overview.

Authors:  M Schuster; F Stelzle
Journal:  Oral Maxillofac Surg       Date:  2012-08-03
  3 in total

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