Andrea Deme
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Journal of Voice | 2014
Andrea Deme
BACKGROUND Studies addressing the identification of sung vowels concern mainly the effect of the fundamental frequency (f0) and conclude that correct vowel identification decreases with increasing pitch. In one experiment, the impact of consonantal environment on the intelligibility of the vowels in high-pitched singing was also studied. The results of that experiment showed positive effect of the consonantal environment. This finding is in line with results that had been reported for speech in an earlier study. However, the data on singing are not as transparent as the authors suggest, and there are some conditions in the experiment that could also be controlled for more strictly. Therefore, the effect of the dynamic acoustic information encoded in the formant transitions at high fundamental frequencies is still an open question. OBJECTIVES The aim of the present study was to redesign and extend the above-mentioned experiment to test whether the phonetic context and the onset of the vowel uttered in isolation (namely the onset of voicing) have a positive effect on vowel identification. METHODS For this purpose, a vowel identification test was carried out. The stimuli included three Hungarian vowels /aː iː uː/ in three conditions (in /bVb/ context, in isolation and with eliminated onset) at seven different fundamental frequencies from 175 to 988 Hz (F3, B3, F4, B4, F5, B5, and speech). The stimuli were produced by one professional soprano singer. RESULTS The results show that consonantal context does not specify vowel identity in singing as clearly as it has been demonstrated for spoken utterances. In addition, no effect of vowel onset (ie, the onset of voicing) was found. Recognition percentages seemed only to be dependent on f0 and vowel quality. CONCLUSIONS The unexpected results lend themselves to two possible explanations: the reduction of the consonants and the undersampling of the formant transitions.
International Seminar on Speech Production | 2017
Alexandra Markó; Andrea Deme; Márton Bartók; Tekla Etelka Gráczi; Tamás Gábor Csapó
We examined vowel-initial irregular phonation in real words as a function of vowel quality, backness and height, and speech rate in Hungarian. We analyzed two types of irregular phonation: glottalization and glottal stop. We found that open vowels elicited more irregular phonation than mid and close ones, but we found no effect of the backness. The frequency of irregular phonation was lower in fast than in slow speech. Inconsistently with the claims of earlier studies, the relative frequency of glottalization to glottal stops was not influenced by speech rate in general. However, while /i/ was produced with a relatively higher ratio of glottal stops in fast speech, the open vowels showed the widely documented tendency of being realized with relatively less glottal stops under the same conditions.
Archive | 2013
Katalin Mády; Ádám Szalontai; Andrea Deme; Balázs Surányi
Archive | 2013
Andrea Deme
Archive | 2014
Andrea Deme
DiSS | 2013
Andrea Deme; Alexandra Markó
Archive | 2018
Andrea Deme; Márton Bartók; Tekla Etelka Gráczi; Alexandra Markó; Tamás Gábor Csapó
Archive | 2018
Alexandra Markó; Márton Bartók; Tekla Etelka Gráczi; Andrea Deme; Tamás Gábor Csapó
9th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2018 | 2018
Alexandra Markó; Márton Bartók; Tekla Etelka Gráczi; Andrea Deme; Tamás Gábor Csapó
9th International Conference on Speech Prosody 2018 | 2018
Katalin Mády; Uwe D. Reichel; Ádám Szalontai; Anna Kohári; Andrea Deme