Kiefte Michael, Nearey Terrance M
School of Human Communication Disorders, Dalhousie University, Halifax B3H 4R2, Canada.
Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta, Edmonton T6G 2E7, Canada.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2017 Jul;142(1):434. doi: 10.1121/1.4991022.
Given recent interest in the analysis of naturally produced spontaneous speech, a large database of speech samples from the Canadian Maritimes was collected, processed, and analyzed with the primary aim of examining vowel-inherent spectral change in formant trajectories. Although it takes few resources to collect a large sample of audio recordings, the analysis of spontaneous speech introduces a number of difficulties compared to that of laboratory citation speech: Surrounding consonants may have a large influence on vowel formant frequencies and the distribution of consonant contexts is highly unbalanced. To overcome these problems, a statistical procedure inspired by that of Broad and Clermont [(2014). J. Phon. 47, 47-80] was developed to estimate the magnitude of both onset and coda effects on vowel formant frequencies. Estimates of vowel target formant frequencies and the parameters associated with consonant-context effects were allowed to vary freely across the duration of the vocalic portion of a syllable which facilitated the examination of vowel-inherent spectral change. Thirty-five hours of recorded speech samples from 223 speakers were automatically segmented and formant-frequency values were measured for all stressed vowels in the database. Consonant effects were accounted for to produce context-normalized vowel formant frequencies that varied across time.