Temporal, spectral and amplitude characteristics of the Greek fricative /s/ in hearing-impaired and normal-hearing speech.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics Pub Date : 2024-08-02 Epub Date: 2024-01-25 DOI:10.1080/02699206.2023.2301308
Anna Sfakianaki, Katerina Nicolaidis, George P Kafentzis
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Abstract

Fricatives, and especially sibilants, are very frequently misarticulated by speakers with hearing loss. Misarticulations can result in phonemic contrast weakening or loss, compromising intelligibility. The present study focuses on the examination of acoustic characteristics of the Greek alveolar fricative /s/, an articulatorily demanding sound, produced by young adult speakers with profound hearing impairment and with normal hearing. An array of variables was examined using mixed-effects and random forest models aiming to assess the effectiveness of various measures in differentiating hearing-impaired and normal-hearing /s/ production. Significant differences were found in spectral and amplitude measures, but not in temporal measures. In hearing-impaired speech, spectral slope and RMS amplitude had significantly lower values, indicating a more distributed spectrum, suggestive of decreased flow velocity through the fricative constriction. Also, a trend for concentration of energy at lower frequencies was observed suggesting more posterior fricative articulation than normal. Moreover, measures capturing the variation of frequency and amplitude over time revealed different patterns of sibilance development across time than normal, denoting the production of a less well-formed or less sibilant /s/ by speakers with hearing impairment. The investigation of contextual effects on /s/ in hearing-impaired speech showed increased spectral variance, negative skewness and lower kurtosis in the labial (rounded) context /u/ in relation to the nonlabial contexts /i/ and /a/, indicating a more diffuse, less compact spectrum with concentration at high frequencies. Findings are discussed in relation to previous literature on fricative production by speakers with hearing impairment and normal hearing in Greek and other languages.

听力障碍者和正常听力者言语中希腊摩擦音/s/的时间、频谱和振幅特征。
有听力损失的人经常会误发摩擦音,尤其是咝声。错误发音会导致音位对比减弱或消失,从而影响可懂度。本研究重点考察了希腊语齿槽摩擦音/s/的声学特征,这是一个发音要求很高的声音,由患有严重听力障碍和听力正常的年轻成年说话者发出。我们使用混合效应模型和随机森林模型对一系列变量进行了研究,旨在评估各种测量方法在区分听力受损和听力正常 /s/ 发声方面的有效性。结果发现,在频谱和振幅测量中存在显著差异,而在时间测量中则没有。在听力受损的语音中,频谱斜率和均方根振幅的值明显较低,表明频谱更加分散,表明通过摩擦音收缩的流速降低。此外,还观察到能量集中在较低频率的趋势,这表明与正常人相比,塞音发音更靠后。此外,捕捉频率和振幅随时间变化的测量结果表明,咝声在不同时间的发展模式与正常人不同,这表明听力受损的说话者发出的/s/发音不清晰或咝声较少。对听力障碍言语中 /s/ 的语境影响进行的调查显示,与非唇音语境 /i/ 和 /a/ 相比,唇音(圆音)语境 /u/ 的频谱方差增大、负偏度和峰度降低,表明频谱更分散、更不紧凑,且集中在高频。研究结果将结合以往关于希腊语和其他语言中听力受损和听力正常的发音人的摩擦音发音的文献进行讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
16.70%
发文量
74
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics encompasses the following: Linguistics and phonetics of disorders of speech and language; Contribution of data from communication disorders to theories of speech production and perception; Research on communication disorders in multilingual populations, and in under-researched populations, and languages other than English; Pragmatic aspects of speech and language disorders; Clinical dialectology and sociolinguistics; Childhood, adolescent and adult disorders of communication; Linguistics and phonetics of hearing impairment, sign language and lip-reading.
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