PERCEPTION OF PROMINENCE IN SPEECH INTONATION INDUCED BY RISING AND FALLING PITCH MOVEMENTS

Authors
Citation
Dj. Hermes et Hh. Rump, PERCEPTION OF PROMINENCE IN SPEECH INTONATION INDUCED BY RISING AND FALLING PITCH MOVEMENTS, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 96(1), 1994, pp. 83-92
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Acoustics
ISSN journal
00014966
Volume
96
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
83 - 92
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-4966(1994)96:1<83:POPISI>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
The object of this study was to investigate whether subjects are able to compare the prominence caused by different types of accent-lending pitch movements and, if so, whether some pitch movements lend more pro minence to a syllable than others. These experiments were carried out with the utterance /ma'mama/, with the second syllable accented by eit her a rise, a fall, or a rise-fall. Subjects adjusted the variable exc ursion size of a comparison stimulus to the fixed excursion size of a test stimulus in such a way that the accented syllable in test and com parison stimuli had equal prominence. The rise-fall was only presented in one ''standard'' position, while the fall and the rise were tested for five different temporal positions in the syllable. Subjects were found to be quite capable of equating the prominence of syllables acce nted by the following types of pitch movement: the rise-fall in standa rd position, the rise starting before the vowel onset, and the fall wh atever its temporal position in the syllable. When lending equal promi nence, the early starting rise and the rise-fall had equal excursion s izes. The fall, however, appeared to lend more prominence to a syllabl e than the rise or the rise-fall of equal excursion size, independent of its position in the syllable. This difference between the fall on t he one hand and the rise and the rise-fall on the other increased with increasing declination of the pitch contour. A model is presented whi ch can explain these phenomena quantitatively.