Abstract

There are abundant acoustic-phonetic cues in speech signals for listeners to encode talker identity. However, speech signals in the real world are always less optimal due to various adverse listening sources. Vocoded speech is one type of simplified signal that has less spectral and/or temporal information in comparison to normal speech. The purpose of this study is to examine whether and how listeners’ judgment of talker accent is affected by noise and tone vocoding. Twelve Mandarin-accented English speakers with varying degree of accentedness and two native English speakers were recorded reading “The Rainbow Passage.” The recorded speech samples from each talker were segmented into small sections that were randomly selected for noise- or tone-excited vocoder processing into 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 channels. The vocoded and unprocessed speech samples were randomly presented to a group of normal-hearing, monolingual English listeners for accent rating. The listeners judged the degree of talker accent on a 9-point Likert scale with “1” representing no accent and “9” representing extremely strong accent. The data are still in the process of being collected and analyzed. Results and implications of the present study will be discussed.

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