14 avril 2005 01 h 01 min
14 avril 2005 24 min
12 mai 2005 52 min
4 février 2005 01 h 18 min
17 octobre 2007 49 min
27 juin 2007 01 h 12 min
11 juillet 2007 48 min
12 septembre 2007 01 h 07 min
19 septembre 2007 01 h 13 min
26 septembre 2007 01 h 00 min
3 octobre 2007 01 h 12 min
10 octobre 2007 01 h 10 min
24 octobre 2007 50 min
21 novembre 2007 57 min
0:00/0:00
Articulatory synthesis is a technique consisting in numerically simulating the physical phenomena involved in speech production. The
aim is to numerically reproduce a speech signal that contains the observed acoustic features with regards to the actual articulatory and
phonatory gestures of the speaker. The talk will show that this tool may be useful for researchers to solve problems related to phonetics,
or more generally speaking, related to speech production. Our application will be the fricatives.
Recent numerical studies have evidenced three distinct regimes of production of fricatives that are controled by the glottal abduction.
These regimes are characterized by the balance between the contributions of both the voiced and the frication noise sources. Interestingly, the regime of voiced fricatives, i.e. when both sources have similar energy, is a very unstable regime, namely small perturbations of the glottal abduction degree leads to large variations of the acoustic characteristics of the produced fricative. Experiments on real subjects have also evidenced these numerical observations, which could explain the different articulatory strategies used by the speakers to ensure the voiced/voiceless contrast during the production of fricatives. These observations open new ways of investigation about the role of these regimes in the percpetion of the voice quality, as well as its analysis and synthesis.
Benjamin Elie du Laboratoire Signaux et Systèmes (Supélec/CNRS/UPS) présente :
"Synthesis of running speech for studying the mechanisms of speech
production : the case of fricatives"
Abstract:
Articulatory synthesis is a technique consisting in numerically
simulating the physical phenomena involved in speech production. The
aim is to numerically reproduce a speech signal that contains the
observed acoustic features with regards to the actual articulatory and
phonatory gestures of the speaker. The talk will show that this tool
may be useful for researchers to solve problems related to phonetics,
or more generally speaking, related to speech production. Our
application will be the fricatives.
Recent numerical studies have evidenced three distinct regimes of
production of fricatives that are controled by the glottal abduction.
These regimes are characterized by the balance between the
contributions of both the voiced and the frication noise sources.
Interestingly, the regime of voiced fricatives, i.e. when both sources
have similar energy, is a very unstable regime, namely small
perturbations of the glottal abduction degree leads to large
variations of the acoustic characteristics of the produced fricative.
Experiments on real subjects have also evidenced these numerical
observations, which could explain the different articulatory
strategies used by the speakers to ensure the voiced/voiceless
contrast during the production of fricatives. These observations open
new ways of investigation about the role of these regimes in the
percpetion of the voice quality, as well as its analysis and
synthesis.
1, place Igor-Stravinsky
75004 Paris
+33 1 44 78 48 43
Du lundi au vendredi de 9h30 à 19h
Fermé le samedi et le dimanche
Hôtel de Ville, Rambuteau, Châtelet, Les Halles
Institut de Recherche et de Coordination Acoustique/Musique
Copyright © 2022 Ircam. All rights reserved.