Abstract

Simultaneous measurements of speech articulator movement and laryngeal activity are desirable for obtaining a picture of the coarticulatory behavior between oral articulators and laryngeal vocal fold behavior. However, since electroglottography (EGG) use the application of a weak current across the larynx, which is in close proximity to the oral vocal tract, there is a possibility that its use may interfere with the sensor voltage fluctuation measurements used in electromagnetic articulography (EMA). In order to investigate any hypothetical interference effect, data was collected using Northern Digital Instruments’ Wave articulograph with Glottal Enterprises’s EG2-PCX electroglottograph. Datasets were collected from one male and one female speaker—both with simultaneous EMA and EGG and, for comparison, with EMA alone. Means and standard deviations of inter-sensor distances for static (i.e., reference) and moving (e.g., tongue tip, lip, and jaw) EMA sensor trajectories were compared across the two collection conditions for possible interference effects. Preliminary results find no discernable differences in inter-sensor distances for either static or moving EMA sensors between the with- and without-EGG conditions. If this finding is maintained for additional speakers, NDI EMA data and GE EGG signals may be collected simultaneously without adverse effects on the measurement. [Work supported by NIH.]

Full Text
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