In the current study, we explore the factors underlying the well-known difficulty in acoustic classification of front fricatives (McMurray & Jongman, 2011; Maniwa et al., 2009) by taking a closer look at the production of 29 native Greek speakers. Our corpus consists of Greek fricatives from five places of articulation and two voicing values [f, v, θ, ð, s, z, ç, ʝ, x, ɣ] produced in nonce disyllabic words before [a, o, u] in stressed syllables (e.g., [ˈθakos]). We apply a relatively novel classification method based on cepstral coefficients, previously successful with obstruent bursts (Bunnell et al., 2004), vowels (Ferragne & Pellegrino, 2010), and Romanian fricatives (Spinu & Lilley, 2016). Our method yields the best correct classification rates reported to date for front fricatives: Present study: 88%; English: 66% (Jongman et al., 2000), Greek: 55.1% (Nirgianaki, 2014). The important cues for the successful classification are the vowel following the target fricative and the second region of frication noise. Our study adds to the body of work aimed at identifying techniques for quantifying and categorizing large samples of speech. Obtaining higher classification rates than before takes us one step closer to understanding the properties of “difficult” sounds like the front fricatives.
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September 2018
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September 01 2018
Cepstral coefficients successfully distinguish the front Greek fricatives Free
Laura Spinu;
Laura Spinu
Communications & Performing Arts, CUNY - Kingsborough Community College, 2001 Oriental Boulevard, Brooklyn, NY 11235-2398, [email protected]
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Jason Lilley;
Jason Lilley
Ctr. for Pediatric Auditory & Speech Sci., Nemours Biomedical Res., Wilmington, DE
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Angeliki Athanasopoulou
Angeliki Athanasopoulou
School of Lang., Linguist, Literatures, and Cultures, Univ. of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
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Laura Spinu
Jason Lilley
Angeliki Athanasopoulou
Communications & Performing Arts, CUNY - Kingsborough Community College, 2001 Oriental Boulevard, Brooklyn, NY 11235-2398, [email protected]
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 144, 1906 (2018)
Citation
Laura Spinu, Jason Lilley, Angeliki Athanasopoulou; Cepstral coefficients successfully distinguish the front Greek fricatives. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 September 2018; 144 (3_Supplement): 1906. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5068354
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