Influence of Sound Immersion and Communicative Interaction on the Lombard Effect

Author:

Garnier Maëva1,Henrich Nathalie2,Dubois Danièle3

Affiliation:

1. Institut Jean Le Rond d’Alembert, LAM, (UMR 7190: UPMC Univ Paris 06, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Ministère de la Culture), Paris, France; and The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

2. GIPSA Laboratory, Department of Speech and Cognition, Grenoble, France (UMR 5216: CNRS, Grenoble University)

3. Institut Jean Le Rond d’Alembert, LAM (UMR 7190: UPMC Univ Paris 06, CNRS, Ministère de la Culture), Paris, France

Abstract

PurposeTo examine the influence of sound immersion techniques and speech production tasks on speech adaptation in noise.MethodIn Experiment 1, we compared the modification of speakers' perception and speech production in noise when noise is played into headphones (with and without additional self-monitoring feedback) or over loudspeakers. We also examined how this sound immersion effect depends on noise type (broadband or cocktail party) and level (from 62 to 86dB SPL). In Experiment 2, we compared the modification of acoustic and lip articulatory parameters in noise when speakers interact or not with a speech partner.ResultsSpeech modifications in noise were greater when cocktail party noise was played in headphones than over loudspeakers. Such an effect was less noticeable in broadband noise. Adding a self-monitoring feedback into headphones reduced this effect but did not completely compensate for it. Speech modifications in noise were greater in interactive situation and concerned parameters that may not be related to voice intensity.ConclusionsThe results support the idea that the Lombard effect is both a communicative adaptation and an automatic regulation of vocal intensity. The influence of auditory and communicative factors has some methodological implications on the choice of appropriate paradigms to study the Lombard effect.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference70 articles.

1. The Lombard Sign as a Function of Age and Task

2. Vocal responses to unanticipated perturbations in voice loudness feedback: An automatic mechanism for stabilizing voice amplitude

3. Boersma P. & Weenink D. (2005). Praat: Doing phonetics by computer (Version 4.2.28) [Computer program]. Retrieved from http://www.praat.org

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