Journal article
Measures of spectral change and their application to habitual, slow, and clear speaking modes
KM Rosen, JE Folker, BE Murdoch, AP Vogel, LM Cahill, MB Delatycki, LA Corben
International Journal of Speech Language Pathology | TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD | Published : 2011
Abstract
Spectral measures are sensitive to dysarthric speech. However, it is unclear whether the spectral differences in dysarthric and healthy speech are due to slow articulation rate or reflect other qualitative changes in speech. Spectral measures were used to detect differences between habitual, slow, and "clear" speaking modes in 12 healthy speakers. Matched t-tests were used to determine differences in the rate and degree of spectral change between the speaking modes. Pearson's correlation coefficients were calculated to assess how well rate of spectral change predicts articulation rate (syllables per second). Clear speech had a significantly higher degree of spectral change than habitual spee..
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