Re: For Speech Understanding ("C.M. Rankovic" )


Subject: Re: For Speech Understanding
From:    "C.M. Rankovic"  <rankovic(at)ARTICULATION.COM>
Date:    Mon, 5 Jan 2004 08:23:40 -0500

Dear Xiao: Bell Telephone Laboratories had a 30-year research program dedicated to determining factors influencing speech intelligibility. Results are contained in the book, ¡°Speech and Hearing in Communication,¡± by Harvey Fletcher (1953). Chapters 15, 16, 17, 18, and 19 provide basic information on these factors, and this may be what you are looking for. Fletcher¡¯s book was quite popular and may among your university's library collection. If not, you may purchase a reissued version (edited by J. B. Allen) from the Acoustical Society of America. (See www.asa.aip.org). Christine Rankovic, PhD Articulation Incorporated 36 Hampshire Street, 2nd Floor Cambridge, MA 02139 USA 617-354-8335 rankovic(at)articulation.com AI = V x E x F x H ----- Original Message ----- From: "xiao xianbo" <xxb00(at)MAILS.TSINGHUA.EDU.CN> To: <AUDITORY(at)LISTS.MCGILL.CA> Sent: Sunday, January 04, 2004 9:12 PM Subject: For Speech Understanding > Dear List, > > I have some questions confusing me. I am doing some signal > processing work to improve impaired persons' hearing. > Now I am focused on OHC and IHC damnification caused deaf. > What I want to know is, in a speech signal, what are the important > cues to keep high intelligibility. For example, > in single channel, phase infomation is not so important, while formants' > location and relative intensity are significative. > Is there some article discribe general facts influencing speech > understanding. These will tell me what to emphasize, what to > dismiss, what to keep, when I design the hearing compensation algorithms. > > Thank all. > > > > > xiao xiaonbo > > Tsinghua Univ. > > Beijing, China


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