Abstract

Speech analysis and synthesis by linear prediction is based on the assumption that the short-time spectral envelope of speech can be represented by a number of poles. An all-pole representation does not provide an accurate description of speech spectra, particularly for nasals and nasalized sounds. This paper presents a method for characterizing speech in terms of the parameters of a pole-zero model. In this method, an impulse response representing the composite filtering action of the glottal wave, the vocal tract, the radiation, and the speech recording system is first constructed from the speech signal. This impulse response is obtained by performing several stages of all-pole LPC analysis. The pole-zero parameters are determined from the impulse response by solving a set of simultaneous linear equations. The method, being noniterative, is very suitable for automatic analysis of speech. The method has been applied to real speech data and the results show that the speech spectra derived from the pole-zero model agree very closely with the actual spectra derived by direct Fourier analysis.

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