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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.32 524-535 September 1989.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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The Importance of Consonant-Vowel Intensity Ratio in the Intelligibility of Voiceless Consonants

Richard L. Freyman 1
G. Patrick Nerbonne 1

1 University of Massachusetts

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the extent to which variations in the consonant-vowel (C-V) intensity ratio could account for variations in speech intelligibility among the productions of 10 talkers. Fifty normal-hearing individuals listened in noise to syllables consisting of voiceless consonants followed by the vowel // under three conditions in which: (a) C-V ratio varied naturally as produced by the talkers, and the stimuli were calibrated according to vowel intensity; (b) C-V ratios were increased and equated via digital signal processing; and (c) C-V ratios were unmodified, but the syllables were calibrated according to consonant level rather than vowel level. Results indicated that variations in C-V ratio explained a great deal of the variation in the intelligibility of some consonants (/s, int, tint/) but not others (the voiceless stops). This difference may well be due to differences in audibility between the two groups of consonants when they are presented at similar consonant-to-noise ratios. The majority of the data suggest that the importance of C-V ratio is related to the intensity of consonants but is independent of the ratio per se between consonant and vowel levels.

KEY WORDS: speech perception, intelligibility, consonants

Submitted on May 23, 1988
Accepted on December 9, 1988







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