• Title/Summary/Keyword: read speech

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Effects of Background Noises on Speech-related Variables of Adults who Stutter (배경소음상황에 따른 성인 말더듬화자의 발화 관련 변수 비교)

  • Park, Jin;Oh, Sunyoung;Jun, Je-Pyo;Kang, Jin Seok
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.27-37
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    • 2015
  • This study was mainly aimed at investigating on the effects of background noises (i.e., white noise, multi-speaker conversational babble) on stuttering rate and other speech-related measures (i.e., articulation rate, speech effort). Nine Korean-speaking adults who stutter participated in the study. Each of the participants was asked to read a series of passages under each of four experimental conditions (i.e., typical solo reading (TR), choral reading (CR), reading under white noise presented (WR), reading with multi-speaker conversational babble presented (BR). Stuttering rate was computed based on a percentage of syllables stuttered (%SS) and articulation rate was also assessed as another speech-related measure under each of the experimental conditions. To examine the amount of physical effort needed to read, the speech effort was measured by using the 9-point Speech Effort Self Rating Scale originally employed by Ingham et al. (2006). Study results showed that there were no significant differences among each of the passage reading conditions in terms of stuttering rate, articulation rate, and speech effort. In conclusion, it can be argued that the two different types of background noises (i.e., white noise and multi-speaker conversational babble) are not different in the extent to which each of them enhances fluency of adults who stutter. Self ratings of speech effort may be also useful in measuring speech-related variables associated with vocal changes induced under each of the fluency enhancing conditions.

Monophthong Analysis on a Large-scale Speech Corpus of Read-Style Korean (한국어 대용량발화말뭉치의 단모음분석)

  • Yoon, Tae-Jin;Kang, Yoonjung
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.139-145
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    • 2014
  • The paper describes methods of conducting vowel analysis from a large-scale corpus with the aids of forced alignment and optimal formant ceiling methods. 'Read Style Corpus of Standard Korean' is used for building the forced alignment system and a subset of the corpus for the processing and extraction of features for vowel analysis based on optimal formant ceiling. The results of the vowel analysis are reliable and comparable to the results obtained using traditional analytical methods. The findings indicate that the methods adopted for the analysis can be extended and be used for more fine-grained analysis without time-consuming manual labeling without losing accuracy and reliability.

Aerodynamic Characteristics of Whispered and Normal Speech during Reading Paragraph Tasks (문단낭독 시 속삭임 발화와 정상 발화의 공기역학적 특성)

  • Pyo, Hwayoung
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.57-62
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    • 2014
  • The present study was performed to investigate and discuss the aerodynamic characteristics of whispered and normal speech during reading paragraph tasks. 39 normal females(18-23 yrs.) read 'Autumn' paragraph with whispered and normal phonation. Their readings were recorded and analyzed by 'Running Speech' in Phonatory Aerodynamic System(PAS) instrument. As results, during whispered speech, the total duration was longer and the numbers of inspiration were more frequently shown than normal speech. The Peak expiratory and inspiratory rate were higher in normal speech, but the expiratory and inspiratory volume were higher in whispered speech. By correlation analysis, both whispered and normal speech showed significantly high correlation between total duration and expiratory/inspiratory airflow duration; numbers of inspiration and inspiratory airflow duration; expiratory and inspiratory volume. These results show that whispered speech needs more respiratory effort but shows poorer aerodynamic efficacy during phonation than normal speech.

Common Speech Database Collection for Telecommunications (통신망환경 한국어 공통음성 DB 구축)

  • Kim Sanghun;Park Moonwhan;Kim Hyunsuk
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2003.05a
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    • pp.23-26
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    • 2003
  • This paper presents common speech database collection for telecommunication applications. During 3 year project, we will construct very large scale speech and text databases for speech recognition, speech synthesis, and speaker identification. The common speech database has been considered various communication environments, distribution of speakers' sex, distribution of speakers' age, and distribution of speakers' region. It consists of Korean continuous digit, isolated words, and sentences which reflects Korean phonetic coverage. In addition, it consists of various pronunciation style such as read speech, dialogue speech, and semi-spontaneous speech. Thanks to the common speech databases, the duplicated resources of Korean speech industries are prohibited. It encourages domestic speech industries and activate speech technology domestic market.

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The Lombard effect on the speech of children with intellectual disability (지적장애 아동의 롬바드 효과에 따른 말산출 특성)

  • Lee, Hyunju;Lee, Jiyun;Kim, Yukyung
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.8 no.4
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    • pp.115-122
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    • 2016
  • This study investigates the acoustic-phonetic features and speech intelligibility of Lombard speech in children with intellectual disability, by examining the effect of Lombard speech at 3 levels of non-noise, 55dB, and 65dB. Eight children with intellectual disability read sentences and played speaking games, and their speech were analyzed in terms of intensity, pitch, vowel space of /a/, /i/, and /u/, VAI(3), articulation rate and speech intelligibility. Results showed, first, that intensity and pitch increased as noise level increased; second, that VAI(3) increased as the noise level increased; third, that articulation rate decreased as noise intensity increased; finally, that speech intelligibility increased as noise intensity increased. The Lombard speech changed the VAI(3), vowel space, articulation rate, speech intelligibility of the children with intellectual disability as well. This study suggests that the Lombard speech will be clinically useful for the persons who have intellectual disability and difficulties in self-control.

Normalization in Collection Procedures of Emotional Speech by Scriptual Context (대본 내용에 의한 정서음성 수집과정의 정규화에 대하여)

  • Jo Cheol-Woo
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2006.05a
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    • pp.123-125
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    • 2006
  • One of the biggest problems unsolved in emotional speech acquisition is how to make or find a situation which is close to natual or desired state from humans. We proposed a method to collect emotional speech data by scriptual context. Several contexts from the scripts of drama were chosen by the experts in the area. Context were divided into 6 classes according to the contents. Two actors, one male and one female, read the text after recognizing the emotional situations in the script.

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Algorithm for Concatenating Multiple Phonemic Units for Small Size Korean TTS Using RE-PSOLA Method

  • Bak, Il-Suh;Jo, Cheol-Woo
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.85-94
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    • 2003
  • In this paper an algorithm to reduce the size of Text-to-Speech database is proposed. The algorithm is based on the characteristics of Korean phonemic units. From the initial database, a reduced phoneme unit set is induced by articulatory similarity of concatenating phonemes. Speech data is read by one female announcer for 1000 phonetically balanced sentences. All the recorded speech is then segmented by phoneticians. Total size of the original speech data is about 640 MB including laryngograph signal. To synthesize wave, RE-PSOLA (Residual-Excited Pitch Synchronous Overlap and Add Method) was used. The voice quality of synthesized speech was compared with original speech in terms of spectrographic informations and objective tests. The quality of the synthesized speech is not much degraded when the size of synthesis DB was reduced from 320 MB to 82 MB.

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Acoustic Measurement of English read speech by native and nonnative speakers

  • Choi, Han-Sook
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.3 no.3
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    • pp.77-88
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    • 2011
  • Foreign accent in second language production depends heavily on the transfer of features from the first language. This study examines acoustic variations in segments and suprasegments by native and nonnative speakers of English, searching for patterns of the transfer and plausible indexes of foreign accent in English. The acoustic variations are analyzed with recorded read speech by 20 native English speakers and 50 Korean learners of English, in terms of vowel formants, vowel duration, and syllabic variation induced by stress. The results show that the acoustic measurements of vowel formants and vowel and syllable durations display difference between native speakers and nonnative speakers. The difference is robust in the production of lax vowels, diphthongs, and stressed syllables, namely the English-specific features. L1 transfer on L2 specification is found both at the segmental levels and at the suprasegmental levels. The transfer levels measured as groups and individuals further show a continuum of divergence from the native-like target. Overall, the eldest group, students who are in the graduate schools, shows more native-like patterns, suggesting weaker foreign accent in English, whereas the high school students tend to involve larger deviation from the native speakers' patterns. Individual results show interdependence between segmental transfer and prosodic transfer, and correlation with self-reported proficiency levels. Additionally, experience factors in English such as length of English study and length of residence in English speaking countries are further discussed as factors to explain the acoustic variation.

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Automatic Detection of Intonational and Accentual Phrases in Korean Standard Continuous Speech (한국 표준어 연속음성에서의 억양구와 강세구 자동 검출)

  • Lee, Ki-Young;Song, Min-Suck
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.209-224
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    • 2000
  • This paper proposes an automatic detection method of intonational and accentual phrases in Korean standard continuous speech. We use the pause over 150 msec for detecting intonational phrases, and extract accentual phrases from the intonational phrases by analyzing syllables and pitch contours. The speech data for the experiment are composed of seven male voices and two female voices which read the texts of the fable 'the ant and the grasshopper' and a newspaper article 'manmulsang' in normal speed and in Korean standard variation. The results of the experiment shows that the detection rate of intonational phrases is 95% on the average and that of accentual phrases is 73%. This detection rate implies that we can segment the continuous speech into smaller units(i.e. prosodic phrases) by using the prosodic information and so the objects of speech recognition can narrow down to words or phrases in continuous speech.

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Speech Rates of Male Esophageal Speech (식도발성 남성 발화의 말 속도)

  • Park, Won-Kyoung;Shim, Hee-Jeong;Ko, Do-Heung
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.143-149
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the speech rate of an esophageal speech group that is capable of vocalization after surgery. The subjects in this experiment were 10 male esophageal speakers and 10 male laryngeal speakers. Each group read a reading passage that was recorded by a DAT recorder (Rolando, EDIROL R-09). These records were analyzed by using CSL (Computerized Speech Lab, model 4150). The results were as follows: (1) the overall speech rate of esophageal speech was 2.50 SPS (syllable per second) while the overall speech rate of laryngeal speech was 4.23 SPS. (2) The articulatory rate of esophageal speech was 3.14 SPS (syllable per second) while the articulatory rate of laryngeal speech was 4.75 SPS. Speech rates as well as articulatory rates of esophageal speech were significantly lower than laryngeal speech. These differences between the two groups may be due to reduced efficiency of airflows across the pharyngeal-esophageal segment for esophageal speakers when compared to airflow through the glottis for laryngeal speakers. These results would provide a guideline in speech rates for esophageal speakers in clinical settings.