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Acoustics of stop consonant-vowel relationships during fluent and stuttered utterances
Institution:2. Department of Information Science and Engineering, JSS Science and Technology University, Mysuru, India;2. Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos, Sao Paulo, Brazil;3. Department of Electrical Engineering, Federal University of Technology of Parana, Cornelio Procopio, Parana, Brazil;4. Department of Otorhynolaryngology, Sao Paulo University School of Medicine, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil;6. Department of Otolaryngology and Tracheo-esophagology, The National Center for Global Health and Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;5. Department of Otolaryngology, The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Hospital, Tokyo, Japan;11. Department of Electrical Engineering, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Sao Carlos, Sao Paulo, Brazil;2. Neurosciences Institute, University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
Abstract:Acoustic duration measures were made on the stop-gap, voice onset time (VOT), and vowel portions of the utterance tu] in the context “425” as spoken ten times or more by five normal speakers, four mild stutterers, and four severe stutterers. The fluent utterances of the severe stutterers were significantly longer than those of normal speakers on stop-gap and vowel durations but not on voice onset times. Despite the slower speech of the severe stutterers, indications of normalization were found in the relatively stable consonant-to-vowel ratios across groups and in the lack of any significant differences of segment durations as a percentage of total utterance times. Normal speakers and mild stutterers showed an inverse relationship between stop-gap and VOT measures across speakers, but severe stutterers did not maintain this relationship for either fluent or stuttered tokens, nor did a mild stutterer suspected of covert stuttering. Stop-gap durations increased while VOTs stayed within normal limits for fluent tokens. For stuttered tokens, some subjects increased the stop-gap and some the VOT depending upon the location of the block. Abnormal gap to VOT ratios may serve to detect convert stuttering.
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