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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.34 753-760 August 1991.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Pitch Effects on Vowel Roughness and Spectral Noise for Subjects in Four Musical Voice Classifications

Ruth A. Newman 1
Floyd W. Emanuel 2

1 University of South Dakota, Vermlllion
2 University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City

This study was designed to investigate the effects of vocal fo on vowel spectral noise level (SNL) and perceived vowel roughness for subjects in high- and low-pitch voice categories. The subjects were 40 adult singers (10 each sopranos, altos, tenors, and basses). Each produced the vowel /a/ in isolation at a comfortable speaking pitch, and at each of seven assigned pitches spaced at whole-tone intervals over a musical octave within his or her singing pitch range. The eight /a/ productions were repeated by each subject on a second test day. The SNL differences between repeated test samples (different days) were not statistically significant for any subject group. For the vowel samples produced at a comfortable pitch, a relatively large SNL was associated with samples phonated by the subjects of each sex who manifested the relatively low singing pitch range. Regarding the vowel samples produced at the assigned-pitch levels, it was found that both vowel SNL and perceived vowel roughness decreased as test-pitch level was raised over a range of one octave. The relationship between vocal pitch and either vowel roughness or SNL approached linearity for each of the four subject groups.

KEY WORDS: spectral noise level, SNL, vocal roughness, pitch

Submitted on May 12, 1989
Accepted on August 28, 1990


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