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Re: [AUDITORY] Effect of sidetone in lowering one's own voice



Hi Ole,

Ed Burns told me (and asked me not to repeat it to anyone) that the Ward/Burns study’s 
level of the white noise played binaurally when the subject was instructed to sing a one-octave ascending major scale was 120 dB SPL. In their lab I tried to do it at only 100 dB and failed.

Strictly for your information.
Pierre Divenyi


Sent from my autocorrecting iPad

On Jun 27, 2019, at 05:48, Ole Adrian Heggli <oleheggli@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Deep,

That depends on whether you are asking about a relative/absolute decrease of pitch or amplitude?

Might be of interest, if it's pitch:

Dixon Ward, W., & Burns, E. M. (1975). Pitch performance in singing without auditory feedback. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 58(S1), S116-S116.
Mürbe, D., Pabst, F., Hofmann, G., & Sundberg, J. (2002). Significance of auditory and kinesthetic feedback to singers' pitch control. Journal of Voice16(1), 44-51.  


Cheers,
Ole Adrian Heggli


tor. 27. jun. 2019 kl. 06:21 skrev D Sen <dsen@xxxxxxxx>:
Are folks aware of work that studies he lowering of one’s own voice when there is feedback of their voice through side-tone (through headphones)?


Thanks,
Deep