Analysis and perception of speech under physical task stressKeith W. Godin, John H.L. HansenINTERSPEECH-2008 |
It is known that speech under physical task stress degrades
speech system performance. Therefore, an analysis of speech
under physical task stress is performed across several parameters
to identify acoustic correlates. Formal listener tests are also
performed to determine the relationship between acoustic correlates
and perception. To verify the statistical significance of all
results, student-t statistical tests are applied. It was found that
fundamental frequency decreases for many speakers, that utterance
duration increases for some speakers and decreases for
others, and that the glottal waveform is quantifiably different
for many speakers. Perturbation of two speech features, fundamental
frequency and the glottal waveform, is applied in listener
tests to quantify the degree to which these features convey physical
stress content in speech. Finally, the enhanced understanding
of physical task stress speech provided here is discussed in
the context of speech systems.
Keywords: physical task stress, stress analysis
Keith W. Godin, John H.L. Hansen (2008). "Analysis and perception of speech under physical task stress", INTERSPEECH-2008, Sep., pp.1674-1677.
@INPROCEEDINGS{Godin2008, author='Keith W. Godin and John H.L. Hansen', title='Analysis and perception of speech under physical task stress', booktitle='INTERSPEECH-2008', month='Sep.', pages='1674-1677', year='2008', address='Brisbane, Australia' }