Dale Evan Metz’s research while affiliated with SUNY Geneseo and other places

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Publications (64)


Effect of Fingerspelling Task on Temporal Characteristics and Perceived Naturalness of Speech Produced During Simultaneous Communication by Inexperienced Signers
  • Article

March 2010

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11 Reads

Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders

Robert L. Whitehead

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Douglas MacKenzie

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Ashley Broska

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[...]

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Nicholas Schiavetti

Suprasegmental Characteristics of Speech Produced during Simultaneous Communication by Inexperienced Signers

June 2009

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37 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education

This study investigated suprasegmental variables of syllable stress and intonation contours in contextual speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC) by inexperienced signers. Ten hearing inexperienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech-alone (SA) conditions speaking a set of sentences containing stressed versus unstressed versions of the same syllables and a set of sentences containing interrogative versus declarative versions of the same words. Results indicated longer sentence durations for SC than SA for all speech materials. Vowel duration and fundamental frequency differences between stressed and unstressed syllables as well as intonation contour differences between declarative and interrogative sentences were essentially the same in both SC and SA conditions. The conclusion that prosodic rules were not violated by inexperienced signers in SC is consistent with previous research indicating that temporal alterations produced during SC do not involve degradation of other temporal or spectral characteristics of English speech.



Effect of syllable-initial voicing on vowel duration during simultaneous communication

May 2006

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18 Reads

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6 Citations

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: Vowel durations following the production of voiced and voiceless stop consonants produced during simultaneous communication (SC) were investigated by recording sign language users during SC and speech alone (SA). Under natural speaking conditions, or speaking alone (SA), vowels following voiced stop consonants are longer in duration than vowels following voiceless stops. Although the results indicated longer sentence durations for SC than SA, they showed no differences in the relative duration of vowels following voiced or voiceless stops. Vowel durations following voiced stop consonants were consistently longer than vowel durations following voiceless stops. This finding is consistent with previous research indicating that global temporal alterations in SC do not degrade temporal or spectral cues of spoken English. Learning outcomes: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to (1) describe simultaneous communication; (2) explain the role of simultaneous communication in communication with persons who are hearing-impaired; (3) describe how the voicing characteristic of syllable-initial consonants affects the duration of subsequent vowels; and (4) explain that simultaneous communication does not influence the relative durations of vowels following voiced and voiceless stop consonants.


Perception of the voicing distinction in speech produced during simultaneous communication

February 2006

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13 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: This study investigated the perception of voice onset time (VOT) in speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC). Four normally hearing, experienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech alone (SA) conditions speaking stimulus words with voiced and voiceless initial consonants embedded in a sentence. Twelve hearing-impaired listeners participated, with three of them randomly assigned to audit the speech sample provided by each one of the four speakers under the SC and SA conditions. In addition, 24 normal hearing listeners were randomly assigned to audit the speech samples produced by the four speakers under the SC and SA conditions, three listeners in noise and three listeners in filtered listening conditions for each of the four speakers. Although results indicated longer sentence durations for SC than SA, results showed no difference in the perception of the voicing distinction for speech produced during SC versus speech produced during SA under either the noise or filtered listening condition, or any difference in perception for the hearing-impaired listeners. This conclusion is consistent with previous research indicating that temporal alterations produced by SC do not produce degradation of temporal or spectral cues in speech or disruption of the perception of specific English phoneme segments. Learning outcomes: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to: (1) describe simultaneous communication; (2) explain the role of simultaneous communication in communication with persons who are hearing-impaired; (3) discuss methods of measuring perception of voice onset time with hearing-impaired listeners and with hearing listeners under filtered and noise conditions; and (4) specify the ability of listeners to perceive the voicing distinction in speech produced during simultaneous communication.


Effects of noise and filtering on the intelligibility of speech produced during simultaneous communication

November 2004

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12 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: This study investigated the effects of noise and filtering on the intelligibility of speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC). Four normal hearing, experienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech alone (SA) conditions speaking Boothroyd's forced-choice phonetic contrast material designed for measurement of speech intelligibility. Twenty-four normal hearing listeners audited the speech samples produced by the four speakers under the SC and SA conditions, three listeners in noise and three listeners in filtered listening conditions for each of the four speakers. Although results indicated longer sentence durations for SC than SA, the data showed no difference in the intelligibility of speech produced during SC versus speech produced during SA under either the noise or filtered listening condition, nor any difference in pattern of phonetic contrast recognition errors between the SA and SC speech samples in either listening condition. This conclusion is consistent with previous research indicating that temporal alterations produced by SC do not produce degradation of temporal or spectral cues to speech intelligibility or disruption of the perception of specific English phoneme segments. Learning outcomes: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to (1) describe simultaneous communication; (2) explain the role of simultaneous communication in communication with children who are deaf; (3) discuss methods of measuring speech intelligibility under filtered and noise conditions; and (4) specify the ability of listeners to perceive speech produced during simultaneous communication under noise and filtered listening conditions.


Acoustic and perceptual characteristics of vowels produced during simultaneous communication

May 2004

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12 Reads

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8 Citations

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: This study investigated the acoustical and perceptual characteristics of vowels in speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC). Twelve normal hearing, experienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech alone (SA) conditions speaking a set of sentences containing monosyllabic words designed for measurement of vowel duration, formant frequencies, and fundamental frequency in consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) syllables and 60 listeners audited the speech samples. Although results indicated longer sentence and vowel durations for SC than SA, the data showed no difference in spectral characteristics of vowels produced during SC versus SA, indicating no degradation of vowel spectrum by rate alteration during SC. Further, no difference was found in listeners' ability to identify vowels produced during SC versus SA, indicating no degradation of vowel perceptual cues during SC. These conclusions are consistent with previous research indicating that temporal alterations produced by SC do not produce degradation of segmental acoustical characteristics of spoken English. Learning outcomes: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to (1) describe simultaneous communication; (2) explain the role of simultaneous communication in communication with children who are deaf; (3) describe vowel acoustics in English speech; (4) discuss methods of measuring vowel perception; (5) specify the acoustic characteristics of vowels produced during simultaneous communication; and (6) specify the ability of listeners to perceive vowels in speech produced during simultaneous communication.


Intelligibility of speech produced during simultaneous communication

May 2004

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19 Reads

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21 Citations

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: This study investigated the overall intelligibility of speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC). Four hearing, experienced sign language users were recorded under SC and speech alone (SA) conditions speaking Boothroyd's (1985) forced-choice phonetic contrast material designed for measurement of speech intelligibility. Twelve hearing-impaired listeners participated, with three of them randomly assigned to audit the speech sample provided by each one of the four speakers under the SC and SA conditions. Although results indicated longer sentence durations for SC than SA, results showed no difference in the overall intelligibility of speech produced during SC versus speech produced during SA, nor any difference in pattern of phonetic contrast recognition errors during SC. This conclusion is consistent with previous research indicating that temporal alterations produced by SC do not produce degradation of temporal or spectral cues in speech or disruption of the perception of specific English phoneme segments. Learning outcomes: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to (1) describe simultaneous communication; (2) explain the role of simultaneous communication in communication with children who are deaf; (3) discuss methods of measuring speech intelligibility; and (4) specify the ability of listeners to perceive speech produced during simultaneous communication.


The Effects of Simultaneous Communication on Production and Perception of Speech

February 2004

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115 Reads

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13 Citations

Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education

This article reviews experiments completed over the past decade at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf and the State University of New York at Geneseo concerning speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC) and synthesizes the empirical evidence concerning the acoustical and perceptual characteristics of speech in SC. Comparisons are drawn between SC and other modes of rate-altered speech that have been used successfully to enhance communication effectiveness. Of particular importance are conclusions regarding the appropriateness of speech produced during SC for communication between hearing and hearing-impaired speakers and listeners and the appropriateness of SC use by parents and teachers for speech development of children with hearing impairment. This program of systematic basic research adds value to the discussion about the use of SC by focusing on the specific implications of empirical results regarding speech production and perception.


Preservation of place and manner cues during simultaneous communication: A spectral moments perspective

November 2002

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29 Reads

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12 Citations

Journal of Communication Disorders

Unlabelled: Spectral moments, which describe the distribution of frequencies in a spectrum, were used to investigate the preservation of acoustic cues to intelligibility of speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC) in relation to acoustic cues produced when speaking alone. The spectral moment data obtained from speech alone (SA) were comparable to those spectral moment data reported by Jongman, Wayland, and Wong (2000) and Nittrouer (1995). The spectral moments obtained from speech produced during SC were statistically indistinguishable from those obtained during SA, indicating no measurable degradation of obstruent spectral acoustic cues during SC. Educational objectives: As a result of this activity, the participant will be able to (1) describe SC; (2) explain the role of SC in communication with children who are deaf; (3) describe the first, third, and fourth spectral moments of obstruent consonants; and (4) identify spectral moment patterns in speech produced during SC.


Citations (48)


... A number of researchers prefer MES in its different variations over categorical rating scaling (e.g., Ellis & Fucci, 1991, 1992Ellis & Pakulski, 2003;Metz, Samar, Schiavetti, Sitler, & Whitehead, 1985;Schiavetti et al., 1981). MES was developed in psychophysics in the 1950s by S. S. Stevens (1951Stevens ( , 1972Stevens ( , 1975, and since then, it has been adapted by other areas of research including speech and hearing, business, marketing, and nursing research as a measure of different attributes, such as intelligibility, loudness, difficulty, believability, appropriateness, importance, frequency, and competency, to name a few. ...

Reference:

Rasch Analysis of Word Identification and Magnitude Estimation Scaling Responses in Measuring Naïve Listeners' Judgments of Speech Intelligibility of Children With Severe-to-Profound Hearing Impairments
Acoustic Dimensions of Hearing-Impaired Speakers' Intelligibility
  • Citing Article
  • Publisher preview available
  • September 1985

... AHFT advanced heart failure therapies DCRDP de Groot Critically Reflective Diagnoses Protocol ethnic groups were aggregated as Patients of Color or White race to preserve anonymity, given shared discrimination during clinical decision-making, 14 and were collected from electronic medical records which are usually self-identified but cannot be guaranteed) and gender in the transcript were tied to discussion in the transcript by correlating with identifying descriptors, patient presentation order at allocation meeting, and patient data reported by each center. The gender of the AHFT speaker was added to unblinded transcriptions by sound appearance, a recognized method for identifying a speaker 15,16 ; team members (R.Y., K.T.H.) individually reported the speaker gender and met with the principal investigator to adjudicate discrepancies. Simultaneous to allocation meetings, AHFT centers reported data (Data S1) for each patient discussed including: allocation decision and reasoning, patient demographics, clinical diseases, and laboratory values. ...

The Influence of Speaker and Listener Gender on Speech Naturalness Ratings: A Methodological Control Study
  • Citing Article
  • October 1999

Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders

... In comparison with other experimental studies on the effect of voicing over vowel duration (e.g. [1,4,20] to name a few), the difference between the physical duration and the perceived duration does not seem significant enough to deny the existence of minimal pairs based on duration in these two phonetic contexts. ...

Effect of Syllable-Initial Voicing on Vowel Duration During Simultaneous Communication in Speech Produced by Inexperienced Signers: A Systematic Replication
  • Citing Article
  • October 2007

Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders

... Prothetic dimensions are best scaled via DME methods; EAI is a poor fit for prothetic dimensions because listeners cannot keep the intervals perceptually equal as they assign stimuli to the various intervals (Stevens, 1971). Conversely, breathiness in dysphonic (Yiu & Ng, 2004) and normal speakers (Sewall et al., 1999), naturalness in stuttered speech (Metz et al., 1990) and tracheoesophageal speech (Eadie & Doyle, 2002a), and pleasantness in dysphonic speakers (Eadie & Doyle, 2002b), have been identified as metathetic. For these dimensions, either DME or EAI scaling is appropriate because listeners' sensitivity to differences is constant over the EAI scale for metathetic continua (Stevens, 1971). ...

A Methodological Control Study of Scaled Vocal Breathiness Measurements
  • Citing Article
  • October 1999

Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders

... Speech intelligibility is one of the important features of spoken language development in severe to profound hearing-impaired child. Intelligibility refers here to "the degree to which the speaker's intended message is recovered by the listener" (13) or "the comprehensibility of the specifically linguistic information encoded by a speaker's utterances" (14). Measuring speech intelligibility, however, is problematic because intelligibility metrics are affected by a number of factors, including articulation/ phonological aspects, suprasegmental factors, contextual, and semantic/morphologic/ syntactic feature (15)(16). ...

Scaling and Transcription Measures of Intelligibility for Populations With Disordered Speech

... Although these scales are easy for SLPs to implement in clinical settings, there are issues with scale properties that call their validity into question. Intelligibility has been shown to be perceived as prothetic, meaning listeners' sensitivity to differences in intelligibility is additive rather than constant across the severity spectrum (Schiavetti et al., 1981). Therefore, scales that rely on equal intervals or linear rating of intelligibility may yield ratings that are not comparable across raters and timepoints. ...

Construct Validity of Direct Magnitude Estimation and Interval Scaling of Speech Intelligibility

... However, we also found a relatively high proportion of females containing mature oocytes from March to April; so, we can consider that the reproductive period extends from January to April. Therefore, the spawning period may change in different years or sites because gametogenesis and gamete release could be influenced by temperature, as in a number of polychaetes (Olive et al., 1997;Gibbs, 1968;Giangrande & Petraroli, 1991;Predevelli, 1994;Olive, 1995). ...

Variable spawning success of Nephtys hombergi (Annelida: Polychaeta) in response to environmental variation - a life history homeostasis?

Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology

... High-speed laryngeal films (4000 frames/s) were made of each subject using the equipment and procedures described by Metz, Whitehead, and Peterson (1980). Briefly, the equipment and procedures permit making high-speed laryngeal films and obtaining noise-free highquality acoustic recordings simultaneously. ...

An optical-illumination system for high-speed laryngeal cinematography
  • Citing Article
  • February 1980

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

... Sussman et al. in 1993 derived three equations of the line for /b/, /d/ and /g/ named locus equations using the average data of ten male and ten female speakers. Locus equations associated with English /b/, /d/ and /g/ for female speakers [26] are shown in Table 2-part 2-a. In linear regression lines, vertical axis is " 2 onset", the horizontal axis is " 2 offset" and the axes' units are kHz. ...

Locus Equations as a Source of Relational Invariance for Stop Place Categorization: A Direct Replication of Sussman, McCaffrey, and Matthews
  • Citing Article
  • October 2001

Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders

... Die studies wat die reelmatighede aangetoon het, het dit slegs vanuit 'n teoretiese oogpunt benader, instrumentele analises gebruik wat nie vir die klinikus beskikbaar is nie, byvoorbeeld elektromiografiese studies en nie gepoog het om die spraakreels van 'n individu aan te toon nie (byvoorbeeld Monsen, 1976;Huntington, Harris & Sholes, 1968). Een van die redes is dat slegs enkele klanke ondersoek is en in die meeste gevalle is die studies net op die fonetiese vlak van spraakproduksie, met ander woorde in betekenislose eenhede, uitgevoer (Metz, 1980;Huntington et al., 1968). Die gebruik van die spraakreels as 'n kommunikasiemedium, waar spraakklanke betekenisonderskeidend aangewend word (op die fonologiese vlak), word nie op die wyse ondersoek nie. ...

Morphological Boundaries and the Timing of Stressed Vowels Produced by Profoundly Hearing Impaired Adults
  • Citing Article
  • January 1980

Journal of Phonetics