Abstract:Hearing loss (HL) simulators, which allow normal hearing (NH) listeners to experience HL, have been used in speech intelligibility experiments, but not in sound quality experiments due to perceptible distortion. If they produced less distortion, they might be useful for NH listeners to evaluate the sound quality of, for example, hearing aids. We conducted perceptual sound quality experiments to compare the Cambridge version of HL simulator (CamHLS) and the Wakayama version of the HL simulator (WHIS), which has the two algorithms of filterbank analysis synthesis (FBAS) and direct time-varying filter (DTVF). The experimental results showed that WHIS with DTVF produces less perceptible distortion in speech sounds than CamHLS and WHIS with FBAS, even when the nonlinear process is working. This advantage is mainly due to the use of the DTVF algorithm, which could be applied to various signal synthesis applications with filterbank analysis.
Abstract:We can estimate the size of the speaker solely based on their speech sounds. We had proposed an auditory computational theory of the stabilised wavelet-Mellin transform (SWMT), which segregates information about the size and shape of vocal tract and glottal vibration, to explain this observation. It was demonstrated that the auditory representation or excitation pattern (EP) associated with a weighting function based on SWMT, referred to as "SSI weigh", made it possible to explain the psychometric functions of size perception. In this study, we investigated whether EP with SSI weight can precisely estimate vocal tract lengths (VTLs) which were measured using male and female MRI data. It was found that the use of SSI weight significantly improved the VTL estimation. Moreover, the estimation errors were significantly smaller in the EP with the SSI weight than those in the commonly used spectra derived from the Fourier transform, Mel filterbank, and WORLD vocoder. It was also shown that the SSI weight can be easily introduced into these spectra to improve the performance.