Acoustic characteristics of fricatives, amplitude of formants and clarity of speech produced without and with a medical mask.
Duy Duong NguyenAntonia Margarita ChaconChristopher L PaytenRebecca J BlackMeet ShethPatricia J McCabeDaniel NovakovicCatherine J MadillPublished in: International journal of language & communication disorders (2022)
What is already known on the subject Previous studies have shown that the overall spectral levels in high frequency ranges and intelligibility are decreased for speech produced with a face mask. It is unclear how different types of the speech signals that is, fricatives and vowels are presented in speech produced with wearing either a medical surgical or KN95 mask. It is also unclear whether ratings of speech clarity are similar for speech produced with these face masks. What this paper adds to existing knowledge Speech data collected using a real-world, clinical and non-laboratory-controlled settings showed differences in the amplitude of fricatives and speech clarity ratings between non-mask and mask-wearing conditions. Formant amplitude did not show significant differences in mask-wearing conditions compared with non-mask. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? Wearing a surgical mask or a KN95 mask had different effects on consonants and vowels. It appeared from the findings in this study that these masks only affected fricative consonants and did not affect vowel production. The poorer speech clarity in these mask-wearing conditions has important implications for speech perception in communication between clinical staff and between medical officers and patients in clinics, and between people in everyday situations. The impact of these masks on speech perception may be more pronounced in people with hearing impairment and communication disorders. In voice evaluation and/or therapy sessions, the effects of wearing a medical mask can occur bidirectionally for both the clinician and the patient. The patient may find it more challenging to understand the speech conveyed by the clinician while the clinician may not perceptually assess patient's speech and voice accurately. Given the significant correlation between clarity ratings and fricative amplitude, improving fricative signals would be useful to improve speech clarity while wearing these medical face masks.
Keyphrases
- hearing loss
- healthcare
- high frequency
- positive airway pressure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- case report
- newly diagnosed
- magnetic resonance
- chronic kidney disease
- end stage renal disease
- bone marrow
- optical coherence tomography
- computed tomography
- risk assessment
- big data
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- smoking cessation
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