Perception of Terminal Fall Contours in Speech Produced by Deaf Persons

Author:

Rubin-Spitz Judith1,McGarr Nancy S.2

Affiliation:

1. NYNEX Science and Technology, White Plains, NY

2. Center for Research in Speech and Hearing Sciences, Graduate Center, CUNY

Abstract

Eight deaf children produced each of nine sentences. F 0 measures were obtained at several locations within each utterance (starting F 0 , peak F 0 , peak F 0 in the final syllable, and final F 0 ). The relative timing of each F 0 measure (ms from onset of the utterance) was also determined. In addition, several difference measures were derived. Listeners experienced with the speech of the deaf were asked to judge whether they heard a terminal fall, rise, or a flat final intonation contour in each utterance. A multiple linear regression analysis was used to determine if any combination of the acoustic measures could predict listeners’ responses. The only variable that made a significant contribution to the regression function was the temporal interval between the terminal peak F 0 and the final F 0 . That is, the more slowly the contour fell the more likely listeners were to perceive the contour as flat, regardless of the amount (in Hz or percentage F 0 ) by which it fell. The regression equation accounted for a statistically significant but not large proportion of the total variance. This suggests that other variables, not measured in this study, play an important role in the perception of utterance final intonation contours in the speech of the deaf.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference32 articles.

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1. Use of Prosodic Information by Hearing-Impaired Children;The Japan Journal of Logopedics and Phoniatrics;2017

2. Intonation issues in the speech of hearing impaired children: analysis, transcription and remediation;Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics;2001-01

3. Production of Sentence-Final Intonation Contours by Hearing-Impaired Children;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2000-04

4. Acoustic and perceptual characteristics of esophageal and tracheoesophageal speech production;Journal of Communication Disorders;2000-03

5. Auditory and Visual Similarity of Pitch Contours;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;1998-02

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