• I'm currently working on my PhD research, which combines psychology with human-machine interaction to determine factors derived from vocal cues that influence the perceived trustworthiness of a speaker (whether human or AI), how this impacts acceptance and use of voice technologies by older adults and ethnic minorities, and how this in turn can impact their social inclusion, motivation and empowerment. (essex.ac.uk)
  • How vocal cues affect trust judgements in minority groups: implications for accessibility and social inclusivity in voice interfaces. (essex.ac.uk)
  • July 28, 2022 New research finds that specific parts of the brain recognize complex cues in human vocal sounds that do not involve speech, such as crying, coughing or gasping. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The precise vocal tract physiology is directly derived from the feature analysis of the speech spectrogram. (ercim.eu)
  • When the vocal cords are not strong and distinct, you may hear someone's voice appear raspy and hoarse. (southcoastpostacute.com)
  • Should the vocal cords or larynx be weak, speech therapy can help before the problem persists. (southcoastpostacute.com)
  • Being able to process non-verbal vocal emotional cues, namely those embedded in speech prosody, impacts on our behavior and communication. (1library.org)
  • Specifically, we investigate how the prosody, including the voice, melody (intonation) and speaking style - in human speech as well as in cat vocalisations - influence the vocal communication. (lu.se)
  • Microsoft offers a set of prebuilt neural voices, which use deep neural networks to overcome the limits of traditional speech synthesis with regard to stress and intonation in spoken language. (microsoft.com)
  • Using a multilevel regression model, the authors found that the paralinguistic cues of intonation and percentage of pauses "significantly predicted ratings of humanness. (madinamerica.com)
  • Do they distinguish between different voices (familiar-unfamiliar, adults-children) and speaking styles (pet-directed, adult-directed), and do they prefer certain intonation patterns? (lu.se)
  • We evaluated the effects of experience in cue weighting of speech stimuli by varying the reliability of two cues to word medial voicing (preceding vowel length and closure duration). (isca-speech.org)
  • Listeners were given either speech or violin stimuli pitch contour pairs that varied in combinations of F0 and spectral slope cues. (escholarship.org)
  • Speech audiometry also provides information regarding discomfort or tolerance to speech stimuli and information on word recognition abilities. (medscape.com)
  • it requires patients to merely indicate when speech stimuli are present. (medscape.com)
  • Prosody refers to the modulation of speech elements such as pitch, duration, volume, and pauses to infuse synthetic voices with a natural and expressive quality, conveying emotional nuances and contextual meaning, thereby reducing the robotic quality of the generated speech, and making it more engaging and comprehensible to listeners. (microsoft.com)
  • Similar to facial expressions, modulations of the tone of voice while speaking - emotional prosody - tell us a lot about the emotional states and intentions of others. (1library.org)
  • She conducted a study called "Who's A Good Boy," which investigated the effects of people's voices on dogs' behavior. (listverse.com)
  • You hear emotion in people's voices, so I definitely used that as a cue," she says. (wskg.org)
  • 2) Cued phonemic referents and spoken phonemic referents can coincide with regard to their linguistic values. (cuedspeech.org)
  • In the current study, the responses within each group tested coincide for 100% of the simultaneously cued and spoken isolated phonemic referents. (cuedspeech.org)
  • This suggests that each of speaking and cueing systematically produce phonemic referents, (i.e., spoken allophones and cued allophones respectively). (cuedspeech.org)
  • Phonemic contrasts are signalled by multiple acoustic cues, with any one cue often being ambiguous. (isca-speech.org)
  • Crucially, the onset of lip-reading at this age corresponds with the onset of canonical babbling, suggesting that babies begin lip-reading because they become interested in speech and language. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Crucially, once lip-reading emerges in infancy, it becomes the default mode of speech processing whenever comprehension is difficult. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Crucially, subjects who heard the useful vowel duration cue in training maintained the vowel duration bias for longer than subjects who heard the useful closure duration cue in training. (isca-speech.org)
  • However, with advancements in artificial intelligence and machine learning, voice assistants will become more adept at understanding context and interpreting human speech. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Feb. 1, 2023 Smart voice assistants are a popular way for people to get quick answers or play their favorite music. (sciencedaily.com)
  • ACR 2023 AI Tool Perfect in Study of Inflammatory Diseases A model that combines machine learning with clinical cues could help clinicians easily differentiate MIS-C from typhus, a new study found. (medscape.com)
  • We use this information to model the human voice quality characteristics that are used by the human auditory system when identifying a speaker's voice. (ercim.eu)
  • The captions can even follow the speaker around and work in crowded spaces, focusing only on the identified speaker's voice. (upworthy.com)
  • Use the batch synthesis API (preview) to asynchronously synthesize text to speech files longer than 10 minutes (for example, audio books or lectures). (microsoft.com)
  • Because lexical candidates are evaluated continuously as the acoustic signal unfolds, and acoustic cues arrive asynchronously, relative proportion of looks to the alternative pictures should reflect the strength of the subject's commitment to each cue over time. (isca-speech.org)
  • To figure out which face goes with which voice, that baby must learn that the mouth is the source of spoken language and that looking at the mouth is essential for figuring out whether a particular person's face goes with a particular voice. (scientificamerican.com)
  • An Analysis of Cued and Spoken Information in Terms of Distinctive Features By Earl Fleetwood, M.A. and Melanie Metzger, Ph.D. (cuedspeech.org)
  • 1) The production and comprehension of cued information like the production and comprehension of spoken information involves use of the mouth. (cuedspeech.org)
  • Nevertheless, according to the current findings, evidence that the statement is true is not evidence that the mouth serves the same articulatory function with regard to the production of cued information and spoken information. (cuedspeech.org)
  • In the current study, responses to cued information differs from responses to spoken information, as predicted, for the N test items - 50% of the simultaneously cued and spoken test material. (cuedspeech.org)
  • For example, and as noted earlier, a cued allophone of /k/ and a spoken allophone of /h/ were rendered simultaneously, both allophones resulting from non-velar productions. (cuedspeech.org)
  • Because a spoken allophone of /k/ would be velar and a cued allophone of /k/ need not be, it appears that the relevant place of production for cued allophones need not be the same as the relevant place of production for spoken allophones. (cuedspeech.org)
  • This supports the findings of previous studies that examine production and/or reception of co-presented and linguistically matched cued and spoken information. (cuedspeech.org)
  • This is despite the fact that cued information and spoken information were rendered simultaneously. (cuedspeech.org)
  • Whether listening to documents or enhancing user experiences with synthesized speech, text to speech transforms text into natural-sounding spoken words. (microsoft.com)
  • This model is trained to convert text input into spoken language output, mimicking the characteristics of a human voice, including pitch, tone, and pronunciation. (microsoft.com)
  • inproceedings{clayards05_psp, author={Meghan Clayards and Richard Aslin and Michael Tanenhaus}, title={{Weighting and waiting: experience mediated cue integration in spoken word recognition}}, year=2005, booktitle={Proc. (isca-speech.org)
  • Child's Voice is a listening-and-spoken-language program for children with hearing loss. (childsvoice.org)
  • Cued Speech helps people who are deaf or hard-of-hearing better understand spoken languages. (cdc.gov)
  • Intriguingly, we also found that bilingual Spanish- and Catalan-learning babies lipread more than their monolingual counterparts, indicating that bilingual babies rely more on visual speech cues to help them keep their two languages apart. (scientificamerican.com)
  • This is illustrated by our latest studies in which my Spanish colleagues, their graduate student Joan Birules and I found that 4-6 year-old bilingual children lip-read more when they are confronted with speech in an unfamiliar than in a familiar language. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The practice also hosts programs, such as the bilingual clinic, feeding and voice clinic, and the alternative communication clinic. (expertise.com)
  • In another charming study , researchers recorded proto-speech of three- to four-month-old infants talking to themselves. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • An implicit assumption is commonly made by researchers in previous studies of Cued Speech. (cuedspeech.org)
  • However, researchers are already working on developing algorithms and techniques that will enable voice assistants to recognize and respond to emotions. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Researchers found participants were less likely to dehumanize those with whom they disagreed when they heard their voices. (madinamerica.com)
  • The researchers found that the voice has a humanizing effect on participants' views of their opponents. (madinamerica.com)
  • The researchers were interested in focusing on the "paralinguistic cues" expressed through human speech, as opposed to the content of speech. (madinamerica.com)
  • Through four studies, the researchers investigated their hypothesis that media containing the human voice would produce more humanized speaker evaluations than text-based media. (madinamerica.com)
  • In order to study this question, the researchers used "text-to-speech computer software" to transcribe speeches from Study 2, thus producing "mindless human voices" absent of the paralinguistic cues typical of human speech. (madinamerica.com)
  • According to ear, nose and throat specialists, this work has enabled the routine and simultaneous application of acoustic and aerodynamic analysis of procedures employed for the diagnosis and treatment of voice disorders in the study of physiology and physiopathology of the singing voice. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Other research found that IDS has the acoustic features of happy, adult-directed speech, and the authors said that "what is special is the widespread expression of emotion to infants in comparison with the more inhibited expression of emotion in typical adult interactions . (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Although the mouth is employed both in cueing and in speaking, this disparity serves as evidence that articulatory relevance of the mouth with regard to the conveyance of linguistic information in the visible and acoustic channels differs. (cuedspeech.org)
  • The project takes a new scientific approach to voice biometrics by using human voice physiology, which produces precise acoustic cues that are unique to each individual speaker. (ercim.eu)
  • The project models acoustic cues of voice physiology and detects them in the first pass of a speaker (voice) authentication system in a deterministic discrete time signal processing architecture. (ercim.eu)
  • The solution combines voice acoustic analysis (rather than models based purely on statistics) with dynamic face recognition (including lip movement and facial analysis). (ercim.eu)
  • Our results demonstrate that listeners weight probabilistic acoustic cues according to their reliability, updating the weighting of those cues to reflect recent experience. (isca-speech.org)
  • Voice assistants, such as Siri or Google Assistant, can be activated through voice commands, helping users access transportation information hands-free. (citizenside.com)
  • Currently, voice assistants can understand and respond to basic commands, but they often struggle with complex or nuanced requests. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • This will enable us to control and interact with these devices using voice commands, making our lives more convenient and efficient. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • This study uses manipulations to the spectral slope to compare listener's cue integration in pitch perception in speech vs. music. (escholarship.org)
  • These findings indicate that individual differences in the engagement of sensorimotor systems, and in its coupling with inferior frontal regions, underpin variation in children's emotional speech perception skills. (1library.org)
  • While work has shown that listeners normalize voice quality cues in linguistic pitch processing, listeners did not show normalization in non-speech (sawtooth waveform) sounds. (escholarship.org)
  • Braille displays and voice assistants are other noteworthy assistive devices that facilitate transportation for visually impaired individuals. (citizenside.com)
  • Voice assistants have become an integral part of our daily lives, helping us with tasks ranging from setting reminders to playing our favorite music. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • In the next decade, we can expect voice assistants to undergo a significant evolution, transforming the way we interact with technology. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • One of the key areas where voice assistants are expected to make strides is in natural language processing. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Another exciting development on the horizon is the integration of voice assistants into a wider range of devices. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Currently, we primarily interact with voice assistants through our smartphones or smart speakers. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • However, in the next decade, we can expect to see voice assistants integrated into a variety of everyday objects, such as cars, appliances, and even clothing. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • In addition to being integrated into various devices, voice assistants are also likely to become more personalized. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Currently, voice assistants are designed to be general-purpose, catering to the needs of a wide range of users. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • However, as technology advances, voice assistants will become better at recognizing individual voices and preferences. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Privacy and security will also be a major focus in the future of voice assistants. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • As voice assistants become more integrated into our lives, concerns about data privacy and security will become increasingly important. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • In response to these concerns, developers and manufacturers will need to prioritize the protection of user data and ensure that voice assistants are designed with robust security measures in place. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Furthermore, the future of voice assistants will also see advancements in their ability to understand and respond to emotions. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • Currently, voice assistants lack the ability to detect and respond to emotional cues in human speech. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • This will open up new possibilities for voice assistants to provide emotional support, offer empathy, and enhance the overall user experience. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • In conclusion, the future of voice assistants holds great promise. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • With advancements in natural language processing, integration into a wider range of devices, personalization, privacy and security, and emotional intelligence, voice assistants will become even more indispensable in our daily lives. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • The next decade will undoubtedly see a transformation in the way we interact with technology, and voice assistants will be at the forefront of this revolution. (aboutxinjiang.com)
  • He was named analyst and journalist of the year in 2019, 2020, and 2021 and is widely cited in media and academic research as an authority on voice assistants and AI. (voicebot.ai)
  • By lip-reading, babies now gain access to visual speech cues which, as Janet Werker and her colleagues at the University of British Columbia have shown , are clearly perceptible to them. (scientificamerican.com)
  • One of the popular branches of speech synthesis is the audio-visual speech synthesis or multimodal speech synthesis which makes use of an animated face tightly synchronized to complement the synthesized speech. (techopedia.com)
  • But it's less clear what happens when these visual cues aren't available in the classroom. (wskg.org)
  • APS uses audible cues to inform pedestrians with visual impairments when it is safe to cross the road. (citizenside.com)
  • Text to speech also has visual capabilities. (microsoft.com)
  • What determines visual cue reliability? (isca-speech.org)
  • To further protect against either data breaches or a sophisticated adversary trying to clone someone's voice print, KnuEdge also offers an additional layer of security with multi-factor authentication based on visual cues. (tomshardware.com)
  • Sit close enough so that you and the person who has dysarthria can use visual cues. (medlineplus.gov)
  • The counterpart of the voice recognition, speech synthesis is mostly used for translating text information into audio information and in applications such as voice-enabled services and mobile applications. (techopedia.com)
  • Computers, Voice Recognition Software, Speech Training. (dyslexiaa2z.com)
  • You will find extensive information on Computers, Assistive technology, Voice Recognition Software (VRS), Software for Dyslexics, and more on this part of the site. (dyslexiaa2z.com)
  • During the last few years, speech recognition software has come a very long way, for instance, 'Dragon Naturally Preferred' is rated independently to be 99% accurate and is so easy to use, you'll wish you changed years ago. (dyslexiaa2z.com)
  • KnuEdge , a San Diego, CA cloud-based speech technologies company founded by Dan Goldin, who was NASA's chief spanning three presidential administrations, unveiled its KnuVerse voice authentication technology, as well as KnuPath, a custom chip that can greatly accelerate voice recognition. (tomshardware.com)
  • The company claimed that KnuVerse is a "military-grade" voice recognition and authentication technology, which has actually been used in military battle environments. (tomshardware.com)
  • Because KnuEdge uses cloud-based speech recognition technology, that also means users' voice prints are kept on the company's servers, or potentially on an enterprise's customers' secure location. (tomshardware.com)
  • As it was working on its voice recognition and authentication technology, the KnuEdge team started thinking about what kind of hardware would be the most efficient for its algorithms. (tomshardware.com)
  • KnuEdge said that the customers interested in KnuPath could be anyone that would normally use GPUs and machine learning to train and infer their own voice recognition algorithms. (tomshardware.com)
  • The company's own KnuVerse voice recognition technology can work on any other device, although the KnuEdge team expects to combine KnuVerse and KnuPath in the future for better results. (tomshardware.com)
  • For patients with normal hearing or somewhat flat hearing loss, this measure is usually 10-15 dB better than the speech-recognition threshold (SRT) that requires patients to repeat presented words. (medscape.com)
  • The speech-recognition threshold (SRT) is sometimes referred to as the speech-reception threshold. (medscape.com)
  • They explain that paralinguistic cues convey distinctly human qualities connected to the "mental capacities" of thinking and feeling, which include reasoning, intellect, and emotional life. (madinamerica.com)
  • In a text to speech system, customers can turn written information into audible speech and improve accessibility for users. (microsoft.com)
  • Being able to efficiently recognize emotions from these cues relates to psychosocial adjustment both in children and adults (Demopoulos et al. (1library.org)
  • It offers personalized therapy services to resolve a variety of voice, swallow, and speech conditions, including dysphagia, voice loss, and Parkinson's disease. (expertise.com)
  • KnuEdge uses rather sophisticated algorithms to identify a person's unique voice print, which should make it hard for someone else to clone and use to gain access to their data. (tomshardware.com)
  • Speech therapy exercises are meant to strengthen the muscles and regain a person's ability to eat and swallow properly. (southcoastpostacute.com)
  • When watching a person's mouth, many speech sounds look the same on the face even though the sounds heard are not the same. (cdc.gov)
  • Most speech synthesis systems are capable of reading texts and outputting them in a very intelligent manner though the voice can at times be dull. (techopedia.com)
  • Similarly, the personalities of Hietala and Niemirepo's (1998) learning companion agents are comprised of a name, a picture and a personal voice and manner of speech (which is exploited as a central social feature).1 Common to all systems is that a social context is created inside the computer (c.f. (lu.se)
  • My area of expertise is Human-Computer Interaction / User Experience, and Psychology of Voice (previously I worked as a full-stack software engineer, specialising in front-end development). (essex.ac.uk)
  • Aug. 11, 2022 The evolution of the human larynx contributed to the stable voices we use to communicate. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Speech synthesis is artificial simulation of human speech with by a computer or other device. (techopedia.com)
  • The quality of the speech computer is often judged by its similarity to the human voice. (techopedia.com)
  • The last stage involves the use of human recordings or basic sound generation techniques to mimic the human voice mechanism and read out the entire text. (techopedia.com)
  • Speech synthesis, however, is yet to develop the ability to fully imitate the wide spectrum of human intonations and cadences. (techopedia.com)
  • In children that are non-verbal, a speech pathologist will identify ways for the child to express themselves that substitutes speaking and promotes human interaction. (cerebralpalsy.org)
  • Text alone lacks…paralinguistic cues that reveal uniquely human mental capacities, thereby enabling dehumanization if readers do not compensate for the absence of these cues. (madinamerica.com)
  • Operator: means services with human intermediaries, such as sign language, cued speech, human-assisted transcriptions, or any other communications assistance, carried out by an approved person that may be put in relation with the User of the Service. (rogervoice.com)
  • Of course, babies cannot access visible speech cues if others are wearing masks. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Do masks in school affect kids' speech and social skills? (wskg.org)
  • Masks can obscure a smile, muffle a voice, and make lip reading impossible. (wskg.org)
  • Amid the debate, a small but growing body of research is offering hints that masks do not have a significant impact on speech or social skills. (wskg.org)
  • The team also found that the complexity of speech sounds was higher in children wearing masks. (wskg.org)
  • One of the issues the deaf and hard of hearing have had to deal with during the pandemic is masks obscuring facial expressions, which often provide cues to what a person is saying,' he says. (upworthy.com)
  • Masks and social distancing also muffle or soften voices, making it tough to understand speech even for people with normal hearing. (medlineplus.gov)
  • It is often easy to guess what is happening in the conversation by listening for other audio cues like questions, short responses and other language cadences. (wikipedia.org)
  • The disparity of responses across groups is evidence that cueing does not entail speaking, that speaking does not entail cueing, and that cueing and speaking are autonomous articulatory processes. (cuedspeech.org)
  • Unlike synthesis performed via the Speech SDK or Speech to text REST API, responses aren't returned in real-time. (microsoft.com)
  • Results show that listeners integrated spectral cues in speech and violin conditions similarly, and listeners with higher musicality had more categorical responses. (escholarship.org)
  • The audience sees your face before they are going to hear your voice and thus, you have the opportunity to set an emotional tone before you even start speaking. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Voices are a primary source of emotional information in everyday interactions. (1library.org)
  • Voices are central to emotional communication in everyday interactions. (1library.org)
  • This can be done by amplitude modulating the speech signal with the carrier, then applying a low-pass filter to select the lower sideband . (wikipedia.org)
  • Listeners attend to multidimensional cues in pitch processing, including the spectral shape. (escholarship.org)
  • Abstract: This paper makes an argument for psychoanalysis in academic research, setting out four main components - the unconscious, speech, sensuality and defences - that form the basis of psychoanalytic research. (bvsalud.org)
  • Please see this message (and thread) which is partly related to pre-recorded audio cues. (w3.org)
  • I would suggest that the spec has been developed with the view that it will be more common in the future that voice sympathizers will have pre-recorded audio cues that are more standardized. (w3.org)
  • Text to speech , part of Azure AI Speech, is a versatile tool that can convert written text into natural-sounding speech audio. (microsoft.com)
  • The feature takes input in the form of text and generates high-quality speech audio output that can be played on devices. (microsoft.com)
  • For the speech audio output, text to speech offers a range of prebuilt neural voices or, for Limited Access customers, the option to create a custom neural voice for your product or brand. (microsoft.com)
  • The core of the work is an original score, which takes cues from a wide range of audio genres including pop, political speeches, voice-overs, and experimental noise. (ucla.edu)
  • IEEE/ACM Transactions on Audio, Speech and Language Processing (TASLP). (arxiv.org)
  • They then randomly assigned other participants ("evaluators," n = 297) to either watch videos, listen to audio recordings, or read transcripts of communicators' speeches. (madinamerica.com)
  • Most computer operating systems have incorporated speech synthesizers since the early 1990s. (techopedia.com)
  • Swap out the servant for a smartphone that uses text-to-speech technology to whisper in your ear at superhuman speed, plus a brain that has been specially trained to make sense of it. (turnkeylinux.org)
  • [1] This will make the low tones of the voice sound like high ones and vice versa. (wikipedia.org)
  • A recent study found that premature babies in intensive care make more vocalisations in response to hearing adults' speech. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Speech and language therapy (sometimes referred to as ST) aims to improve, and make possible, a child with Cerebral Palsy's ability to effectively communicate their thoughts and ideas to the world. (cerebralpalsy.org)
  • The workout takes priority, so this intentionally distracting chatter will not make you miss any exercise cues. (mirrorservice.org)
  • Cued Speech allows the person to make out sounds and words when they are using other building blocks, such as speech reading (lip reading) or auditory training (listening). (cdc.gov)
  • If you notice a pattern of repetitive behavior according to the signs listed, be sure to contact your physician or speech therapist for further guidance. (southcoastpostacute.com)
  • Шизофренія Schizophrenia is characterized by psychosis (loss of contact with reality), hallucinations (false perceptions), delusions (false beliefs), disorganized speech and behavior, flattened affect. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Quantifying sources of variability in infancy research using the infant-directed speech preference. (uni-trier.de)
  • These particular characteristics of "parentese" or infant-directed speech (IDS) seem to be common across many languages. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Elise and her colleagues, Marius Iordan and Casey Lew-Williams, then used a computer algorithm to compare adult and infant-directed speech. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • The algorithm picked up the same difference between their adult- and infant-directed speech. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Voice inversion scrambling is an analog method of obscuring the content of a transmission. (wikipedia.org)
  • May I suggest that css3-speech may include non normative text to suggest to authors that such CSS properties and values for 'voice-volume' and 'cue' may not be widely supported and many users may not have such voice sympathizers of a certain standard that can fully support these properties. (w3.org)
  • These treatments include pediatric speech and language therapy, autism and ABA therapy, occupational therapy, and physical therapy. (expertise.com)
  • These include tone of voice, clarity of speed, rate of speech, and whether or not they hesitate. (producttalk.org)
  • Speech audiometer input devices include microphones (for live voice testing), tape recorders, and CDs for recorded testing. (medscape.com)
  • The initial stage in speech synthesis is pre-processing, which eliminates the ambiguity surrounding the manner in which the specific word needs to be read, and which also includes handling homographs. (techopedia.com)
  • Initial biases should be towards the candidate most consistent with the vowel duration cue. (isca-speech.org)
  • Speech pathologists increase a child's oral motor skills and communication acumen by using exercises that train the brain to pronounce - as well as understand and interpret - individual words, sounds, numbers and gestures. (cerebralpalsy.org)
  • For one group, preceding vowel length was a reliable cue (predicted voicing) and closure duration was not. (isca-speech.org)
  • Later looks should be to the candidate consistent with the closure duration cue. (isca-speech.org)
  • As predicted, early looks were consistent with biases generated by the vowel duration cue and later looks were consistent with biases generated by the closure duration cue. (isca-speech.org)
  • and those at risk of losing their ability to speak can use Personal Voice to create a synthesized voice that sounds like them for connecting with family and friends. (apple.com)
  • The podcast features actors giving dogs praise and telling them stories in soothing voices over soft music and ambient sounds. (listverse.com)
  • It remains unclear whether speaker normalization is unique to speech, or common across all natural sounds, including musical sounds. (escholarship.org)
  • Music…forest sounds…a grandchild's voice…all of the sounds we want to hear become muted and lack quality. (cdc.gov)
  • Speech therapy increases a child's potential for independence and positively impacts their quality of life. (cerebralpalsy.org)
  • Although your face and voice play a major role in communicating a specific emotion, your posture will communicate the intensity of that emotion. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Thus, where the reception and comprehension of linguistic information is concerned, the mouth neither functions as an articulatory instrument of speech to the deaf native cuer nor as an articulatory instrument of cuem to the hearing native speaker. (cuedspeech.org)
  • Children's Innovative Therapy Group helps children in Bethesda improve their speech clarity and communication skills. (expertise.com)
  • You have a well-written and researched speech and you have already sought out a peer review from the Writing and Communication Centre, but the easy part is over. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • Eye contact, one of the most important nonverbal cues, keeps your audience engaged, makes you believable, and opens up communication. (uwaterloo.ca)
  • In a series of four studies, Dr. Juliana Schroeder and colleagues explored the role of communication mode (speech vs. text) in individuals' perceptions of those with whom they strongly disagreed. (madinamerica.com)
  • In a set of related studies, Shroeder and her team sought to explore whether an individual's voice, as embodied in speech, signals the presence of thinking and feeling to others and thus makes the speaker seem more "humanlike" than she or he otherwise would through text-based communication. (madinamerica.com)
  • Another indicator of speech-related difficulties is when a person is noticeably relying on the non-verbal cues and communication mannerisms of others. (southcoastpostacute.com)
  • This is the conclusion of the PhD thesis undertaken by Dr. María Uzcanga whose research work was carried out in the Voice Laboratory at the Navarre University Hospital. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Thus, it is significant that the results of the current study provide evidence counter to the conclusion that cueing entails, includes, provides, or equates to knowledge of, or competence in, either the production or reception of speech. (cuedspeech.org)
  • How children speak with their voice assistant Sila depends on what they think about her! (uni-trier.de)
  • Do cochlear-implanted children benefit from voice cue differences for understanding speech in speech masker? (rug.nl)