The Influence of Male- and Female-Spoken Vowel Acoustics on Envelope-Following Responses

Author:

Easwar Vijayalakshmi12,Purcell David3,Eeckhoutte Maaike Van456,Aiken Steven J.7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders & Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison

2. Department of Communication Sciences, National Acoustic Laboratories, Sydney, Australia

3. National Center for Audiology, School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Western University, London, Canada

4. Division of Hearing Systems, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

5. Copenhagen Hearing and Balance Centre - Ear, Nose, Throat and Audiology Clinic, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark

6. National Center for Audiology, Western University, London, Canada

7. School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Departments of Surgery and Psychology and Neuroscience, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe influence of male and female vowel characteristics on the envelope-following responses (EFRs) is not well understood. This study explored the role of vowel characteristics on the EFR at the fundamental frequency (f0) in response to the vowel /ε/ (as in “head”). Vowel tokens were spoken by five males and five females and EFRs were measured in 25 young adults (21 females). An auditory model was used to estimate changes in auditory processing that might account for talker effects on EFR amplitude. There were several differences between male and female vowels in relation to the EFR. For male talkers, EFR amplitudes were correlated with the bandwidth and harmonic count of the first formant, and the amplitude of the trough below the second formant. For female talkers, EFR amplitudes were correlated with the range of f0 frequencies and the amplitude of the trough above the second formant. The model suggested that the f0 EFR reflects a wide distribution of energy in speech, with primary contributions from high-frequency harmonics mediated from cochlear regions basal to the peaks of the first and second formants, not from low-frequency harmonics with energy near f0. Vowels produced by female talkers tend to produce lower-amplitude EFR, likely because they depend on higher-frequency harmonics where speech sound levels tend to be lower. This work advances auditory electrophysiology by showing how the EFR evoked by speech relates to the acoustics of speech, for both male and female voices.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Speech and Hearing

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