Abstract
This study explored how the Lombard effect, a natural or artificial increase in speech loudness in noisy environments, can improve speech-in-noise communication. This study consisted of several experiments that measured the impact of different types of noise on synthesizing the Lombard effect. The main steps were as follows: first, a dataset of speech samples with and without the Lombard effect was collected in a controlled setting; then, the frequency changes in the speech signals were detected using the McAulay and Quartieri algorithm based on a 2D speech representation; next, an average formant track error was computed as a metric to evaluate the quality of the speech signals in noise. Three image assessment methods, namely the SSIM (Structural SIMilarity) index, RMSE (Root Mean Square Error), and dHash (Difference Hash) were used for this purpose. Furthermore, this study analyzed various spectral features of the speech signals in relation to the Lombard effect and the noise types. Finally, this study proposed a method for automatic noise profiling and applied pitch modifications to neutral speech signals according to the profile and the frequency change patterns. This study used an overlap-add synthesis in the STRAIGHT vocoder to generate the synthesized speech.
Citations
-
0
CrossRef
-
0
Web of Science
-
0
Scopus
Authors (4)
Cite as
Full text
- Publication version
- Accepted or Published Version
- DOI:
- Digital Object Identifier (open in new tab) 10.3390/electronics12244933
- License
- open in new tab
Keywords
Details
- Category:
- Articles
- Type:
- artykuły w czasopismach
- Published in:
-
Electronics
no. 12,
ISSN: 2079-9292 - Language:
- English
- Publication year:
- 2023
- Bibliographic description:
- Korvel G., Kąkol K., Treigys P., Kostek B.: Applying the Lombard Effect to Speech-in-Noise Communication// Electronics -,iss. 24 (2023), s.4933-4951
- DOI:
- Digital Object Identifier (open in new tab) 10.3390/electronics12244933
- Sources of funding:
-
- Free publication
- Verified by:
- Gdańsk University of Technology
seen 67 times
Recommended for you
Investigating Noise Interference on Speech Towards Applying the Lombard Effect Automatically
- G. Korvel,
- K. Kąkol,
- P. Treigys
- + 1 authors
INVESTIGATION OF THE LOMBARD EFFECT BASED ON A MACHINE LEARNING APPROACH
- G. Korvel,
- P. Treigys,
- K. Kąkol
- + 1 authors