Intelligibility of interrupted
speech
Miller and Licklider (J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 22: 167-173,1950)
investigated the effects of replacing portions of CVC
syllables with silence. Their results showed that periodic interruption
of speech (50% on/off cycle) resulted only in a
small decline in intelligibility if the rate of interruption was between
about 10-100 Hz. Intelligibility suffered when the
interruption rate was low (<2 Hz), presumably because entire syllables
and/or phonemes were replaced by silence.
Performance also declined with higher interruption rates (>200 Hz)
where subjects reported a noisy quality, as though
an additional sound source had been superimposed.
The effects of speech interruption are illustrated with audio examples
below. The first example is of a male voice
saying "The watchdog gave a warning growl." This is followed by several
processed versions in which 50%
of the speech waveform is replaced by silence. This was achieved by
multiplying the digital signal with a
square wave window function alternating between 0 and 1. The audio
examples illustrate interruption rates of
1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, and 512 Hz. The figure shows the
waveform of the sentence processed
with a 1-Hz interruption rate.
.WAV format
.AU format
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Original sentence
Original sentence
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1 Hz interruption rate
1 Hz interruption rate (see figure)
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2 Hz interruption rate
2 Hz interruption rate
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4 Hz interruption rate
4 Hz interruption rate
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8 Hz interruption rate
8 Hz interruption rate
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16 Hz interruption rate
16 Hz interruption rate
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32 Hz interruption rate
32 Hz interruption rate
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64 Hz interruption rate
64 Hz interruption rate
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128 Hz interruption rate
128 Hz interruption rate
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256 Hz interruption rate
256 Hz interruption rate
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512 Hz interruption rate
512 Hz interruption rate
Email:
assmann@utdallas.edu
School of Human Development
The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson,
Texas, 75083, USA
Tel: (214) 883-2435
FAX: (214) 883-2491