Abstract

Measurements have been made on the discrimination of speech contrasts on the basis of single-channel vibrotactile presentation of a variety of speech-derived signals, coded as amplitude- and frequency-modulated pulse trains. Stimulation was at the index fingertip. The signals chosen for tactile presentation were the speech amplitude envelope, the voice fundamental frequency FO and the zero-crossing frequency in the 1.3-6.6 kHz band. "Two-feature' codings, which present two of these signals simultaneously (one coded as stimulus frequency and one coded as stimulus amplitude), were found to be no more effective than "single feature' codings which present only one signal (coded as both amplitude and frequency). Scores for consonant discrimination were highest for the single-feature coding of zero-crossing frequency, although differences between the codings were not, in general, significant. Scores for emphatic-stress discrimination were highest for the single-feature coding of F0, and this coding produced best results overall. A practical wrist-worn device, whose design is influenced by these experimental results is briefly described.

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