Abstract
The current study explored perception of prosody in normal and whispered speech using a two-interval, two-alternative forced-choice psychophysical task where listeners discriminated between French noun phrases pronounced as declaratives or interrogatives. Stimuli were either presented between 50 and 8000 Hz or filtered into one of three broad frequency regions, corresponding to harmonic-resolvability regions for normal speech (resolved, partially resolved, unresolved harmonics). Normal speech was presented against a speech-shaped noise masker, whereas whispered speech was presented in quiet. The results showed that discrimination performance was differentially affected by filtering for normal and whispered speech, suggesting that cues to prosody differ between speech modes. For whispered speech, evidence was mainly derived from the high-frequency region, whereas for normal speech, evidence was mainly derived from the low-frequency (resolved harmonics) region. Modeling of the early stages of auditory processing confirmed that for whispered speech, perception of prosody was not based on temporal auditory cues and suggests that listeners may rely on place of excitation (spectral) cues that are, in contrast with suggestions made by earlier work, distributed across the spectrum. (C) 2014 Acoustical Society of America.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2026-2040 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Journal of the Acoustical Society of America |
Volume | 135 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Apr 2014 |
Funding
This research was supported by a Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme and by ANR grant "Labex Institute d'Etude de la Cognition" (ANR-10-LABX-0087 IEC and ANR-10-IDEX-0001-02 PSL*). The second author was also supported by the ANR HEARFIN grant. The authors would like to thank Tim Ives and Agnes Leger for support with programming and analysis and Axelle Calcus for help in testing subjects.
Keywords
- PITCH PERCEPTION
- COMPLEX TONES
- TEMPORAL INTEGRATION
- UNRESOLVED HARMONICS
- LINGUISTIC STRESS
- FILTERED SPEECH
- FINE-STRUCTURE
- MODEL
- INTELLIGIBILITY
- DISCRIMINATION