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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.36 694-700 August 1993.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Vowel Classification Based on Fundamental Frequency and Formant Frequencies

James Hillenbrand 1
Robert T. Gayvert 2

1 Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo
2 RIT Research Corporation Rochester, NY

A quadratic discriminant classification technique was used to classify spectral measurements from vowels spoken by men, women, and children. The parameters used to train the discriminant classifier consisted of various combinations of fundamental frequency and the three lowest formant frequencies. Several nonlinear auditory transforms were evaluated. Unlike previous studies using a linear discriminant classifier, there was no advantage in category separability for any of the nonlinear auditory transforms over a linear frequency scale, and no advantage for spectral distances over absolute frequencies. However, it was found that parameter sets using nonlinear transforms and spectral differences reduced the differences between phonetically equivalent tokens produced by different groups of talkers.

KEY WORDS: vowel recognition, speech recognition, speech acoustics, pattern recognition

Submitted on September 29, 1992
Accepted on March 17, 1993


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