The contribution of durational and spectral changes to the Lombard speech intelligibility benefit

Abstract
Speech produced in the presence of noise (Lombard speech) is typically more intelligible than speech produced in quiet (plain speech) when presented at the same signal-to-noise ratio, but the factors responsible for the Lombard intelligibility benefit remain poorly understood. Previous studies have demonstrated a clear effect of spectral differences between the two speech styles and a lack of effect of fundamental frequency differences. The...
Paper Details
Title
The contribution of durational and spectral changes to the Lombard speech intelligibility benefit
Published Date
Feb 1, 2014
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