Abstract

Whispered speech is a naturally distorted speech signal. Whereas it preserves some characteristics of fully phonated speech, some important acoustic cues are removed, diminished, or altered. The prominence of acoustic cues in whispered speech may change due to the physical properties of the whispered speech signal, i.e., decreased intensity, the absence of periodic vibration of the vocal folds, damping of F1, shift of the formants, and flattening of the amplitude envelope. Such changes affect the acoustic cues both for vowels (e.g., vowel height) and consonants (e.g., voicing contrasts). The objective of the present project was to explore the acoustic cues for poststressed syllable‐final consonant voicing contrasts and the vowels preceding them in continuous whispered speech of American English speakers and to compare the results with those in fully phonated speech. The stimuli were recorded in the carrier sentence “I’ll utter /habVC/ off the list.” The consonant pairs included voiced/voiceless bilabial s...

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