학술논문

A Comparative Study of 3D and 1D Acoustic Simulations of the Higher Frequencies of Speech
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing IEEE/ACM Trans. Audio Speech Lang. Process. Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, IEEE/ACM Transactions on. 31:3837-3847 2023
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
General Topics for Engineers
Acoustics
Three-dimensional displays
Solid modeling
Transfer functions
Shape
Speech processing
Resonant frequency
Articulatory synthesis
wideband speech
multimodal method
Language
ISSN
2329-9290
2329-9304
Abstract
Articulatory synthesis generates speech sounds by simulating the physical phenomena involved in speech production. The accuracy of the physical modelling is expected to affect the naturalness of the synthesis: the more realistic the description is, the greater the naturalness is expected to be. In this work, the accuracy of acoustic wave propagation in the vocal tract was evaluated with two perceptual experiments. Sustained vowels generated using a one-dimensional acoustic model, a three-dimensional acoustic model and an artificial bandwidth extension algorithm (without a physical basis) were compared. Since the difference between the acoustic methods tested affects mainly the frequencies above 4 kHz, we ensured that the low frequency part of the stimuli, up to 4 kHz, was similar. Thus, the participants' responses were based only on the differences at high frequency. The first experiment was a pair comparison, in which the participants had to select the more natural sounding stimuli. In the second experiment, the participants had to rate the naturalness of the stimuli on a linear scale. The results confirmed that a more accurate physical modeling leads to greater naturalness. However, this was limited to the phonemes /o/ and /u/, for which transverse resonances in the anterior vocal tract may play an important role that only a 3D acoustic simulation can accurately represent. It was also found that male stimuli were perceived as significantly more natural than female ones. However, voice quality did not affect naturalness.