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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.39 311-321 April 1996.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Acoustic Correlates of Breathy Vocal Quality

Dysphonic Voices and Continuous Speech

James Hillenbrand 1
Robert A. Houde 2

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

james.hillenbrand{at}wmich.edu

In an earlier study, we evaluated the effectiveness of several acoustic measures in predicting breathiness ratings for sustained vowels spoken by nonpathological talkers who were asked to produce nonbreathy, moderately breathy, and very breathy phonation (Hillenbrand, Cleveland, & Erickson, 1994). The purpose of the present study was to extend these results to speakers with laryngeal pathologies and to conduct tests using connected speech in addition to sustained vowels. Breathiness ratings were obtained from a sustained vowel and a 12-word sentence spoken by 20 pathological and 5 nonpathological talkers. Acoustic measures were made of (a) signal periodicity, (b) first harmonic amplitude, and (c) spectral tilt. For the sustained vowels, a frequency domain measure of periodicity provided the most accurate predictions of perceived breathiness, accounting for 92% of the variance in breathiness ratings. The relative amplitude of the first harmonic and two measures of spectral tilt correlated moderately with breathiness ratings. For the sentences, both signal periodicity and spectral tilt provided accurate predictions of breathiness ratings, accounting for 70%–85% of the variance.

KEY WORDS: breathy voice, voice disorders, acoustic analysis, dysphonia, periodicity

Submitted on May 24, 1995
Accepted on September 6, 1995


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