Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.

Joint speech behaviours where speakers produce speech in unison are found in a variety of everyday settings, and have clinical relevance as a temporary fluency-enhancing technique for people who stutter. It is currently unknown whether such synchronisation of speech timing among two speakers is also...

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Autores principales: Abigail R Bradshaw, Carolyn McGettigan
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/302c5fe80eb94288a26e9d36b28d96a1
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:302c5fe80eb94288a26e9d36b28d96a12021-12-02T20:16:39ZConvergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0258747https://doaj.org/article/302c5fe80eb94288a26e9d36b28d96a12021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258747https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203Joint speech behaviours where speakers produce speech in unison are found in a variety of everyday settings, and have clinical relevance as a temporary fluency-enhancing technique for people who stutter. It is currently unknown whether such synchronisation of speech timing among two speakers is also accompanied by alignment in their vocal characteristics, for example in acoustic measures such as pitch. The current study investigated this by testing whether convergence in voice fundamental frequency (F0) between speakers could be demonstrated during synchronous speech. Sixty participants across two online experiments were audio recorded whilst reading a series of sentences, first on their own, and then in synchrony with another speaker (the accompanist) in a number of between-subject conditions. Experiment 1 demonstrated significant convergence in participants' F0 to a pre-recorded accompanist voice, in the form of both upward (high F0 accompanist condition) and downward (low and extra-low F0 accompanist conditions) changes in F0. Experiment 2 demonstrated that such convergence was not seen during a visual synchronous speech condition, in which participants spoke in synchrony with silent video recordings of the accompanist. An audiovisual condition in which participants were able to both see and hear the accompanist in pre-recorded videos did not result in greater convergence in F0 compared to synchronisation with the pre-recorded voice alone. These findings suggest the need for models of speech motor control to incorporate interactions between self- and other-speech feedback during speech production, and suggest a novel hypothesis for the mechanisms underlying the fluency-enhancing effects of synchronous speech in people who stutter.Abigail R BradshawCarolyn McGettiganPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 10, p e0258747 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Abigail R Bradshaw
Carolyn McGettigan
Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
description Joint speech behaviours where speakers produce speech in unison are found in a variety of everyday settings, and have clinical relevance as a temporary fluency-enhancing technique for people who stutter. It is currently unknown whether such synchronisation of speech timing among two speakers is also accompanied by alignment in their vocal characteristics, for example in acoustic measures such as pitch. The current study investigated this by testing whether convergence in voice fundamental frequency (F0) between speakers could be demonstrated during synchronous speech. Sixty participants across two online experiments were audio recorded whilst reading a series of sentences, first on their own, and then in synchrony with another speaker (the accompanist) in a number of between-subject conditions. Experiment 1 demonstrated significant convergence in participants' F0 to a pre-recorded accompanist voice, in the form of both upward (high F0 accompanist condition) and downward (low and extra-low F0 accompanist conditions) changes in F0. Experiment 2 demonstrated that such convergence was not seen during a visual synchronous speech condition, in which participants spoke in synchrony with silent video recordings of the accompanist. An audiovisual condition in which participants were able to both see and hear the accompanist in pre-recorded videos did not result in greater convergence in F0 compared to synchronisation with the pre-recorded voice alone. These findings suggest the need for models of speech motor control to incorporate interactions between self- and other-speech feedback during speech production, and suggest a novel hypothesis for the mechanisms underlying the fluency-enhancing effects of synchronous speech in people who stutter.
format article
author Abigail R Bradshaw
Carolyn McGettigan
author_facet Abigail R Bradshaw
Carolyn McGettigan
author_sort Abigail R Bradshaw
title Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
title_short Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
title_full Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
title_fullStr Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
title_full_unstemmed Convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
title_sort convergence in voice fundamental frequency during synchronous speech.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/302c5fe80eb94288a26e9d36b28d96a1
work_keys_str_mv AT abigailrbradshaw convergenceinvoicefundamentalfrequencyduringsynchronousspeech
AT carolynmcgettigan convergenceinvoicefundamentalfrequencyduringsynchronousspeech
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