Abstract

Previous research showed that aspiration noise difference limens in moderately breathy /a/ vowels decreased as the spectral slope of the glottal source spectrum became increasingly steep [Kreiman and Gerratt, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 131(1), 492-500 (2012)]. The current study investigated whether discrimination of aspiration noise levels was affected by differences in spectral shape due to vowel quality (/æ/ and /i/) and speaker identity (three male speakers) when the slope of the glottal source spectrum was fixed. The results showed that discrimination performance was worse overall for /i/ than /æ/, but the result may have resulted from relatively poor performance for the /i/ vowel of one speaker. Acoustic analyses of the stimuli were performed to estimate the association between acoustic properties and the perceptual outcomes. The results showed that both the smoothed cepstral peak prominence and the harmonic energy level between 2 and 5 kHz may account for the observed differences in aspiration noise discrimination among speakers within each vowel, but not for differences between vowel categories. It is possible that the relationship between the aspiration noise discrimination and aforementioned acoustic properties may be modulated by the spectral distribution of energy across frequency.

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