Acoustic vocal tract model of one-year-old children
Citations Over Time
Abstract
The physical shape of vocal tract and its formant (resonant) frequencies are directly related. The study of this functional connectivity is essential in speech therapy practice with children. Most of the perceived children's speech anomalies can be explained on a physical level: malfunctioning movement of articulation organs. The current problem is that there is no enough data on the anatomical shape of children's vocal tract to create its acoustic model. Classical techniques for vocal tract shape imaging (X-ray, magnetic resonance, etc.) are not appropriate for children. One possibility is to start from the shape of the adult vocal tract and correct it based on anatomical, morphological and articulatory differences between children and adults. This paper presents a method for vocal tract shape estimation of the child aged one year. The initial shapes of the vocal tract refer to the Russian vowels spoken by an adult male. All the relevant anatomical and articulation parameters, that influence the formant frequencies, are analyzed. Finally, the hypothetical configurations of the children's vocal tract, for the five vowels, are presented.
Related Papers
- → New cepstral zero-pole vocal tract models for TTS synthesis(2002)15 cited
- → A method for estimating vocal-tract shape from a target speech spectrum(2015)5 cited
- → Formant frequencies for incrementally varying vocal tract(1978)
- → Development of a vocal tract design tool based on a growth curve of the vocal tract length(2013)
- → Development of a vocal tract design tool based on a growth curve of the vocal tract length(2013)