Abstract

Intonation has many perceptually significant functions in language that contribute to speech recognition. This study aims to investigate whether intonation cues affect the unmasking of Mandarin Chinese speech in the presence of interfering sounds. Specifically, intelligibility of multi-tone Mandarin Chinese sentences with maskers consisting of either two-talker speech or steady-state noise was measured in three (flattened, typical, and exaggerated) intonation conditions. Different from most of the previous studies, the present study only manipulate and modify the intonation information but preserve tone information. The results showed that recognition of the final keywords in multi-tone Mandarin Chinese sentences was much better under the original F0 contour condition than the decreased F0 contour or exaggerated F0 contour conditions whenever there was a noise or speech masker, and an exaggerated F0 contour reduced the intelligibility of Mandarin Chinese more under the speech masker condition than that under the noise masker condition. These results suggested that speech in a tone language (Mandarin Chinese) is harder to understand when the intonation is unnatural, even if the tone information is preserved, and an unnatural intonation contour decreases releasing Mandarin Chinese speech from masking, especially in a multi-person talking environment.

Highlights

  • Speech recognition and auditory comprehension are some of the most important activities encountered in everyday life

  • The results showed that the performance under the exaggerated intonation condition in the presence of speech masker was much worse than the performance against a noise masker

  • This study investigated the extent to which listeners can use intonation information to identify and selectively attend to a Chinese nonsense target utterance in noise and whether intonation cues affect the unmasking of Mandarin speech

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Speech recognition and auditory comprehension are some of the most important activities encountered in everyday life. Intonation has many perceptually significant functions in language that contribute to the comprehension and recognition of speech[1,2]. The literature has investigated the role of intonation in speech intelligibility by flattening the fundamental frequency (F0) contours of normal speech and comparing the recognition of these stimuli to naturally intonated speech[4]. The findings within these studies have indicated a detrimental effect of flattening the F0 contour on sentence intelligibility.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call