Literature DB >> 8655810

Compensation to articulatory perturbation: perceptual data.

S R Baum1, D H McFarland, M Diab.   

Abstract

The perceptual adequacy of vowels, stop consonants, and fricatives produced under conditions of articulatory perturbation was explored. In a previous study [McFarland and Baum, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 97, 1865-1873 (1995)], acoustic analyses of segments produced in two subtests (immediate compensation and postconversation) revealed small but significant changes in spectral characteristics of vowels and consonants under bite-block as compared to normal conditions. For the vowels only, adaptation increased subsequent to a period of conversation with the bite block in place, suggesting that compensation may develop over time and that consonants may require a longer period of adaptation. The present follow-up investigation examined whether the acoustic differences across conditions were perceptually salient. Ten listeners performed an identification and a quality rating task for stimuli from the earlier acoustic study. Results revealed reductions in identification scores and quality ratings for a subset of the vowels and consonants in the bite-block conditions relative to the normal condition in the immediate compensation subtest. In the postconversation subtest, quality ratings for the fricatives in the bite-block condition remained low as compared to those in the normal condition. Perceptual results are compared to the previous acoustic data gathered on these stimuli.

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8655810     DOI: 10.1121/1.414996

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  6 in total

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Authors:  Benjamin Munson; Nancy Pearl Solomon
Journal:  Int J Orofacial Myology       Date:  2016-11

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6.  Mapping typical and hypokinetic dysarthric speech production network using a connected speech paradigm in functional MRI.

Authors:  Shalini Narayana; Megan B Parsons; Wei Zhang; Crystal Franklin; Katherine Schiller; Asim F Choudhri; Peter T Fox; Mark S LeDoux; Michael Cannito
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  6 in total

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