Laura Lund Kuhlmann’s research while affiliated with IT University of Copenhagen and other places

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Publications (2)


Effects of Speaking Rate on Breathing and Voice Behavior
  • Article

October 2021

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43 Reads

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7 Citations

Journal of Voice

Laura Lund Kuhlmann

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Jenny Iwarsson

Objectives The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of speaking rate (habitual and fast) and speech task (reading and spontaneous speech) on seven dependent variables: Breath group size (in syllables), Breath group duration (in seconds), Lung volume at breath group initiation, Lung volume at breath group termination, Lung volume excursion for each breath group (in % vital capacity), Lung volume excursion per syllable (in % vital capacity) and mean speaking Fundamental frequency (fO). Methods Ten women and seven men were included as subjects. Lung volume and breathing behaviors were measured by respiratory inductance plethysmography and fO was measured from audio recordings by the Praat software. Statistical significance was tested by analysis of variance. Results For both reading and spontaneous speech, the group increased mean breath group size and breath group duration significantly in the fast speaking rate condition. The group significantly decreased lung volume excursion per syllable in fast speech. Females also showed a significant increase of fO in fast speech. The lung volume levels for initiation and termination of breath groups, as well as lung volume excursions in % vital capacity, showed great individual variations and no significant effects of rate. Significant effects of speech task were found for breath group size and lung volume excursion per syllable, where reading induced more syllables produced per breath group and less % VC spend per syllable as compared to spontaneous speech. Interaction effects showed that the increases in breath group size and breath group duration associated with fast rate were significantly larger in reading than in spontaneous speech. Conclusion Our data from 17 vocally untrained, healthy subjects showed great individual variations but still significant group effects regarding increased speaking rate, where the subjects seemed to spend less air per syllable and inhaled less often as a consequence of greater breath group sizes in fast speech. Subjects showed greater changes in breath group patterns as a consequence of fast speech in reading than in spontaneous speech, indicating that effects of speaking rate are dependent on the speech task.


Unintended imitation of fundamental frequency in female speakers

January 2019

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56 Reads

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1 Citation

Logopedics, Phoniatrics, Vocology

Objective: Former studies have shown that humans unintentionally adopt speech characteristics from their conversation partners, a phenomenon known as speech convergence. This study investigated imitation of fundamental frequency (Fo) in nine healthy females in a repetition task. Method: The design included two conditions; loud reading (baseline) and repetition after a model talker. The model talker was a female with a high-pitched voice and stimuli included both words and nonwords. All productions were analyzed with regard to mean and SD of Fo and compared between conditions and word types. Results: The participants showed different patterns regarding the effect on Fo, thus indicating that some individuals are more likely to change their speaking Fo in a repetition task than others. Group results showed somewhat but not significantly higher mean Fo in the repetition task as compared to baseline (reading). Moreover, nonwords were produced with a significantly higher mean Fo than real words, in both reading and repetition conditions. No interaction effect between condition and word type was found.

Citations (2)


... Inhalations are vital for speech, as they supply the lungs with the air that is needed to power speech production and occur every 3-4 s in most speech situations (Kuhlmann & Iwarsson, 2021;Rochet-Capellan & Fuchs, 2013;Winkworth et al., 1994), thus temporally structuring the flow of speech (Fuchs & Rochet-Capellan, 2021). Moreover, respiration is important for gas exchange with the environment and has an important biological function. ...

Reference:

Acoustics of Breath Noises in Human Speech: Descriptive and Three-Dimensional Modeling Approaches
Effects of Speaking Rate on Breathing and Voice Behavior
  • Citing Article
  • October 2021

Journal of Voice

... The instructions given are believed to have an effect: there is more convergence in tasks where participants are asked to imitate the speaker (conscious accommodation) than simply repeat after them (unconscious accommodation), though researchers argue for the same underlying mechanism in both (Dufour & Nguyen, 2013). Finally, a variety of variables have been implicated: voice onset time in stops (Enzinna, 2018;Nielsen, 2011;Shockley, Sabadini, & Fowler, 2004), speaking rate (Jungers, Palmer, & Speer, 2002;Schweitzer & Lewandowski, 2013), vowel quality (Babel, McAuliffe, & Haber, 2013;Tilsen, 2009), vocal intensity (Natale, 1975), and fundamental frequency (Babel & Bulatov, 2012;Gregory, Dagan, & Webster, 1997;Kuhlmann & Iwarsson, 2020;Phillips & Clopper, 2011). ...

Unintended imitation of fundamental frequency in female speakers
  • Citing Article
  • January 2019

Logopedics, Phoniatrics, Vocology