Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. Explicit comparisons of the distributions generated by these measures are rare, although they help assess the robustness of generalisations across studies; moreover, for forensic purposes it is valuable to compare measures in terms of their discriminating power. We compare five common rate measures ― canonical and surface syllable and phone rates, and CV segment rate ― calculated over fluent stretches of spontaneous speech produced by 30 English speakers. We report deletion rates and correlations between the five measures and assess discriminating powers using likelihood ratios. Results suggest that in a sizeable English corpus with normal del...
The interaction between speech rate and rhythm is a topic that has hardly been studied in respective...
The present study focuses on two problems connected with speech tempo. First, earlier research has b...
It is widely accepted that languages can be classified into (two or) three rhythm classes: Stress-ti...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. E...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. T...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. T...
Studies that quantify speech tempo tend to use one of various available rate measures. The relations...
Studies that quantify speech tempo tend to use one of various available rate measures. The relations...
Forensic phoneticians have found speech tempo to be an important parameter for forensic speaker comp...
Studies of speech tempo commonly use syllable or segment rate as a proxy measure for perceived tempo...
Studies of speech tempo commonly use syllable or segment rate as a proxy measure for perceived tempo...
Studies in which speech tempo is quantified commonly use either syllable or segment rate as a proxy ...
Human listeners can distinguish between languages of different rhythmic classes (e.g. stress- and sy...
The accuracy of speech recognition systems is known to be affected by fast speech. If fast speech ca...
Dellwo V, Wagner P. Relationships between rhythm and speech rate. Presented at the 15th Internationa...
The interaction between speech rate and rhythm is a topic that has hardly been studied in respective...
The present study focuses on two problems connected with speech tempo. First, earlier research has b...
It is widely accepted that languages can be classified into (two or) three rhythm classes: Stress-ti...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. E...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. T...
Studies that quantify speech tempo on acoustic grounds typically use one of various rate measures. T...
Studies that quantify speech tempo tend to use one of various available rate measures. The relations...
Studies that quantify speech tempo tend to use one of various available rate measures. The relations...
Forensic phoneticians have found speech tempo to be an important parameter for forensic speaker comp...
Studies of speech tempo commonly use syllable or segment rate as a proxy measure for perceived tempo...
Studies of speech tempo commonly use syllable or segment rate as a proxy measure for perceived tempo...
Studies in which speech tempo is quantified commonly use either syllable or segment rate as a proxy ...
Human listeners can distinguish between languages of different rhythmic classes (e.g. stress- and sy...
The accuracy of speech recognition systems is known to be affected by fast speech. If fast speech ca...
Dellwo V, Wagner P. Relationships between rhythm and speech rate. Presented at the 15th Internationa...
The interaction between speech rate and rhythm is a topic that has hardly been studied in respective...
The present study focuses on two problems connected with speech tempo. First, earlier research has b...
It is widely accepted that languages can be classified into (two or) three rhythm classes: Stress-ti...