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speech info

availability at 250 Hz-4000Hz audio doneprint

QuestionAnswer
Where are the 1st formant of vowels /u/ and /i/ located? 250 Hz
Where are the fundamental frequency of females and children's voices? 250 Hz
Nasal murmur associated with the phonemes /m/, /n/, and /ng/ began at? 250 Hz
Male voice Harmonics are found at what hz? 250 Hz
Voicing cues can be heard at? 250 & 500 & 1000 Hz
Prosody is at 250 Hz
Suprasegmentals patterns such as stress, rate, inflection and intonation are found at 250 & 500 &1000 Hz
1st formants of most vowels are found at? 500 Hz
Harmonics of all voices (male, female and child) are found at what Hz? 500 Hz
Nasality Cues are at 500 & 1000 Hz
Some plosive bursts associated with /b/ & /d/ are found at 500 Hz
Important acoustic cues of manner are at 1000 Hz
2nd formants of back and central vowels are at 1000 Hz
Important consonant-vowel and vowel-consonant transition information is found at 1000 Hz
Some plosive bursts at 1000 Hz
Important acoustic cues for place of articulation are available at? 2000 Hz
2nd & 3rd formant information for front vowels 2000 Hz
consonant-vowel and vowel-consonant transition information 2000 Hz
Acoustic information for the liquids /r/ and /l/ 2000 Hz
plosive bursts 2000 Hz
affricate burst 2000 Hz
fricative turbulence 2000 Hz
Key frequency for /s/ and /z/ audibility (critical for language learning) 4000 Hz
plurals, idioms, possessives, auxillaries, 3rd person, singular verb forms, questions, copulas, past perfect 4000 Hz
Created by: LSLS
 

 



Voices

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