Abstract
The purpose of this investigation was to calculate, from vowels in continuous speech, the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N ratio) and average fundamental vocal frequency ( F 0) for hearing-impaired young adults who demonstrated varying degrees of vocal tension/harshness, and to correlate these acoustic measures with the degree of perceived vocal tension/harshness. Subjects for this investigation consisted of 20 hearing-impaired males and 20 hearing-impaired females who ranged in degree of tension/harshness from severe to normal/relaxed. S/N ratios and F 0s were calculated, using a computer analysis program, from audio recordings of the speakers' reading of the first two sentences of the Rainbow Passage. The results indicated significant correlations between S/N ratios and degree of perceived tension/ harshness, as well as between the average F 0s and perceived tension/harshness. The clinical implications of these objective acoustic measures are discussed.
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