Intelligibility of Normal Speech I: Global and Fine-Grained Acoustic-Phonetic Talker Characteristics
Author: Ann R. Bradlow, Gina M. Torretta, and David B. Pisoni
Abstract:
This study used a multi-talker database containing intelligibility scores
for 2000 sentences (20 talkers, 100 sentences), to identify talker-related
correlates of speech intelligibility. We first investigated "global"
talker characteristics (e.g., gender, F0 and speaking rate). Findings showed
female talkers to be more intelligible as a group than male talkers. Additionally,
we found a tendency for F0 range to correlate positively with higher speech
intelligibility scores. However, F0 mean and speaking rate did not correlate
with intelligibility. We then examined several fine-grained acoustic-phonetic
talker-characteristics as correlates of overall intelligibility. We found
that talkers with larger vowel spaces were generally more intelligible than
talkers with reduced spaces. In investigating two cases of consistent listener
errors (segment deletion and syllable affiliation), we found that these
perceptual errors could be traced directly to detailed timing characteristics
in the speech signal. Results suggest that a substantial portion of variability
in normal speech intelligibility is traceable to specific acoustic-phonetic
characteristics of the talker. knowledge about these factors may be valuable
for improving speech synthesis and recognition strategies, and for special
populations (e.g., the hearing-impaired and second-language learners) who
are particularly sensitive to intelligibility differences among talkers.