In this paper, we study speech development in children using longitudinal acoustic and articulatory data. Data were collected yearly from grade 1 to grade 4 from four female and four male children. We analyze acoustic and articulatory properties of four corner vowels: /æ/, /i/, /u/, and /A/, each occurring in two different words (different surrounding contexts). Acoustic features include formant frequencies and subglottal resonances (SGRs). Articulatory features include tongue curvature degree (TCD) and tongue curvature position (TCP). Based on the analyses, we observe the emergence of sex-based differences starting from grade 2. Similar to adults, the SGRs divide the vowel space into high, low, front, and back regions at least as early as grade 2. On average, TCD is correlated with vowel height and TCP with vowel frontness. Children in our study used varied articulatory configurations to achieve similar acoustic targets.
more »
« less
How an aglossic speaker produces an alveolar-like percept without a functional tongue tip
It has been previously observed [McMicken, Salles, Berg, Vento-Wilson, Rogers, Toutios, and Narayanan. (2017). J. Commun. Disorders, Deaf Stud. Hear. Aids 5(2), 1–6] using real-time magnetic resonance imaging that a speaker with severe congenital tongue hypoplasia (aglossia) had developed a compensatory articulatory strategy where she, in the absence of a functional tongue tip, produced a plosive consonant perceptually similar to /d/ using a bilabial constriction. The present paper provides an updated account of this strategy. It is suggested that the previously observed compensatory bilabial closing that occurs during this speaker's /d/ production is consistent with vocal tract shaping resulting from hyoid raising created with mylohyoid action, which may also be involved in typical /d/ production. Simulating this strategy in a dynamic articulatory synthesis experiment leads to the generation of /d/-like formant transitions.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 1908865
- PAR ID:
- 10594016
- Publisher / Repository:
- Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Volume:
- 147
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 0001-4966
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: p. EL460-EL464
- Size(s):
- p. EL460-EL464
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Humans rarely speak without producing co-speech gestures of the hands, head, and other parts of the body. Co-speech gestures are also highly restricted in how they are timed with speech, typically synchronizing with prosodically-prominent syllables. What functional principles underlie this relationship? Here, we examine how the production of co-speech manual gestures influences spatiotemporal patterns of the oral articulators during speech production. We provide novel evidence that words uttered with accompanying co-speech gestures are produced with more extreme tongue and jaw displacement, and that presence of a co-speech gesture contributes to greater temporal stability of oral articulatory movements. This effect–which we term coupling enhancement–differs from stress-based hyperarticulation in that differences in articulatory magnitude are not vowel-specific in their patterning. Speech and gesture synergies therefore constitute an independent variable to consider when modeling the effects of prosodic prominence on articulatory patterns. Our results are consistent with work in language acquisition and speech-motor control suggesting that synchronizing speech to gesture can entrain acoustic prominence.more » « less
-
Variability in speech pronunciation is widely observed across different linguistic backgrounds, which impacts modern automatic speech recognition performance. Here, we evaluate the performance of a self-supervised speech model in phoneme recognition using direct articulatory evidence. Findings indicate significant differences in phoneme recognition, especially in front vowels, between American English and Indian English speakers. To gain a deeper understanding of these differences, we conduct real-time MRI-based articulatory analysis, revealing distinct velar region patterns during the production of specific front vowels. This underscores the need to deepen the scientific understanding of self-supervised speech model variances to advance robust and inclusive speech technology.more » « less
-
In one aspect, the disclosure relates to a smart pseudo-palate for use in a Smart Electropalatograph (EPG) for Linguistic and Medical Applications (SELMA) system. In one aspect, the pseudo-palate is constructed from a thin, flexible polymer membrane and having an embedded electrode array. The pseudo-palate is configured to detect tongue contacts during speech while causing minimal disturbance or interference with speech motion. The disclosed pseudo-palate in the SELMA system is integrated with a microcontroller, wireless electronic module, and external readout app. The disclosure, in another aspect, relates to integration of the pseudo-palate with a smart sports/health mouth guard containing a series of sensors for monitoring head impacts, body temperature, and heart rate. The SELMA system is capable of automated detection of neurological conditions and brain injury including, but not limited to, concussion, and neurological movement disorders, using acoustic, articulatory, and other biosignals from the device using deep data analysis.more » « less
-
This study investigated the effects of Parkinson’s disease (PD) and various linguistic factors on the degree of lenition in Spanish stops. Lenition was estimated from posterior probabilities calculated by recurrent neural networks trained to recognize sonorant and continuant phonological features. Firstly, individuals with PD exhibited a higher degree of lenition in their voiceless stops compared to healthy controls, suggesting that PD significantly impacts the articulatory control of stops, resulting in more pronounced lenition. Secondly, lenition was significantly more advanced for dental stops than bilabial stops, further suggesting that the muscles controlling tongue tip movement are more affected than those involved in lip movement among PD patients. These findings are consistent with previous literature. Importantly, the results highlight the sensitivity of Phonet in quantifying lenition in this group of PD patients.more » « less
An official website of the United States government
