@inproceedings{rykova-werner-2019-perceptual,
title = "Perceptual and acoustic analysis of voice similarities between parents and young children",
author = "Rykova, Evgeniia and
Werner, Stefan",
editor = "Hartmann, Mareike and
Plank, Barbara",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics",
month = sep # "{--}" # oct,
year = "2019",
address = "Turku, Finland",
publisher = {Link{\"o}ping University Electronic Press},
url = "https://aclanthology.org/W19-6127",
pages = "262--271",
abstract = "Human voice provides the means for verbal communication and forms a part of personal identity. Due to genetic and environmental factors, a voice of a child should resemble the voice of her parent(s), but voice similarities between parents and young children are underresearched. Read-aloud speech of Finnish-speaking and Russian-speaking parent-child pairs was subject to perceptual and multi-step instrumental and statistical analysis. Finnish-speaking listeners could not discriminate family pairs auditorily in an XAB paradigm, but the Russian-speaking listeners{'} mean accuracy of answers reached 72.5{\%}. On average, in both language groups family-internal f0 similarities were stronger than family-external, with parents showing greater family-internal similarities than children. Auditory similarities did not reflect acoustic similarities in a straightforward way.",
}
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<abstract>Human voice provides the means for verbal communication and forms a part of personal identity. Due to genetic and environmental factors, a voice of a child should resemble the voice of her parent(s), but voice similarities between parents and young children are underresearched. Read-aloud speech of Finnish-speaking and Russian-speaking parent-child pairs was subject to perceptual and multi-step instrumental and statistical analysis. Finnish-speaking listeners could not discriminate family pairs auditorily in an XAB paradigm, but the Russian-speaking listeners’ mean accuracy of answers reached 72.5%. On average, in both language groups family-internal f0 similarities were stronger than family-external, with parents showing greater family-internal similarities than children. Auditory similarities did not reflect acoustic similarities in a straightforward way.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Perceptual and acoustic analysis of voice similarities between parents and young children
%A Rykova, Evgeniia
%A Werner, Stefan
%Y Hartmann, Mareike
%Y Plank, Barbara
%S Proceedings of the 22nd Nordic Conference on Computational Linguistics
%D 2019
%8 sep–oct
%I Linköping University Electronic Press
%C Turku, Finland
%F rykova-werner-2019-perceptual
%X Human voice provides the means for verbal communication and forms a part of personal identity. Due to genetic and environmental factors, a voice of a child should resemble the voice of her parent(s), but voice similarities between parents and young children are underresearched. Read-aloud speech of Finnish-speaking and Russian-speaking parent-child pairs was subject to perceptual and multi-step instrumental and statistical analysis. Finnish-speaking listeners could not discriminate family pairs auditorily in an XAB paradigm, but the Russian-speaking listeners’ mean accuracy of answers reached 72.5%. On average, in both language groups family-internal f0 similarities were stronger than family-external, with parents showing greater family-internal similarities than children. Auditory similarities did not reflect acoustic similarities in a straightforward way.
%U https://aclanthology.org/W19-6127
%P 262-271
Markdown (Informal)
[Perceptual and acoustic analysis of voice similarities between parents and young children](https://aclanthology.org/W19-6127) (Rykova & Werner, NoDaLiDa 2019)
ACL