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Inharmonic speech reveals the role of harmonicity in the cocktail party problem

Author

Listed:
  • Sara Popham

    (MIT
    UC Berkeley)

  • Dana Boebinger

    (MIT
    Harvard University)

  • Dan P. W. Ellis

    (Google Research)

  • Hideki Kawahara

    (Wakayama University)

  • Josh H. McDermott

    (MIT
    Harvard University)

Abstract

The “cocktail party problem” requires us to discern individual sound sources from mixtures of sources. The brain must use knowledge of natural sound regularities for this purpose. One much-discussed regularity is the tendency for frequencies to be harmonically related (integer multiples of a fundamental frequency). To test the role of harmonicity in real-world sound segregation, we developed speech analysis/synthesis tools to perturb the carrier frequencies of speech, disrupting harmonic frequency relations while maintaining the spectrotemporal envelope that determines phonemic content. We find that violations of harmonicity cause individual frequencies of speech to segregate from each other, impair the intelligibility of concurrent utterances despite leaving intelligibility of single utterances intact, and cause listeners to lose track of target talkers. However, additional segregation deficits result from replacing harmonic frequencies with noise (simulating whispering), suggesting additional grouping cues enabled by voiced speech excitation. Our results demonstrate acoustic grouping cues in real-world sound segregation.

Suggested Citation

  • Sara Popham & Dana Boebinger & Dan P. W. Ellis & Hideki Kawahara & Josh H. McDermott, 2018. "Inharmonic speech reveals the role of harmonicity in the cocktail party problem," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-13, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-04551-8
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04551-8
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