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Acoustic analysis of the effects of alcohol on the human voice

Cooney, Orla (1998) Acoustic analysis of the effects of alcohol on the human voice. Master of Science thesis, Dublin City University.

Abstract
An experiment has been designed and implemented to determine the physical effects of alcohol on the human voice Sustained phonation and prescribed text voice recordings were taken from twelve volunteers at different stages of alcohol consumption. A computer based analysis has been earned out on these voice recordings to determine whether a significant change in voice frequencies occurs when alcohol has been consumed. The effect of alcohol consumption on sentence duration has also been investigated. The results obtained from the analysis show that there is no association between the fundamental frequency of a sustained phonation and the level of alcohol consumption (regression coefficient = 0 146, F = 0 078, df= 71, p= 0 781). Similar results are recorded for the formant frequencies. For the utterance of vowel sounds within spoken sentences it was found that the fundamental frequency rose on average by 1 7Hz (std err = 0 57, F = 8 9, df = 237, p = 0 003) per ml alcohol per kilogram bodymass Prescribed-text, sentence duration is observed to increase by 6 4% (std err 0 5%, p < 0 0001) per ml of alcohol consumed per kilogram bodymass. There is no evidence that the sex of the speaker is related to the effect of alcohol on sentence duration. We conclude that there is no correlation observed between the level of alcohol consumed and variations m the characteristics of the human voice. A system has been developed whereby speech samples are filtered as a means of simulating noise induced hearing loss. A Chebychev low pass filter has been designed using the Matlab programming package and this filter has been applied to voice samples that are spoken in environments of different noise levels. The resulting voice samples give an indication as to the level of hearing damage incurred by individuals suffereing from noise induced hearing loss.
Metadata
Item Type:Thesis (Master of Science)
Date of Award:1998
Refereed:No
Supervisor(s):Henry, Martin O.
Uncontrolled Keywords:Vocal Care and hygiene; Alcohol Physiological effect
Subjects:Physical Sciences > Chemistry
DCU Faculties and Centres:DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Science and Health > School of Physical Sciences
Use License:This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License
ID Code:18441
Deposited On:18 Jul 2013 13:09 by Celine Campbell . Last Modified 09 Oct 2013 11:47
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