Physics:Formant

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Short description: Spectrum of phonetic resonance in speech production, or its peak
Spectrogram of American English vowels [i, u, ɑ] showing the formants F1 and F2

In speech science and phonetics, a formant is the broad spectral maximum that results from an acoustic resonance of the human vocal tract.[1][2] In acoustics, a formant is usually defined as a broad peak, or local maximum, in the spectrum.[3][4] For harmonic sounds, with this definition, the formant frequency is sometimes taken as that of the harmonic that is most augmented by a resonance. The difference between these two definitions resides in whether "formants" characterise the production mechanisms of a sound or the produced sound itself. In practice, the frequency of a spectral peak differs slightly from the associated resonance frequency, except when, by luck, harmonics are aligned with the resonance frequency.

A room can be said to have formants characteristic of that particular room, due to its resonances, i.e., to the way sound reflects from its walls and objects. Room formants of this nature reinforce themselves by emphasizing specific frequencies and absorbing others, as exploited, for example, by Alvin Lucier in his piece I Am Sitting in a Room. In acoustic digital signal processing, the way a collection of formants (such as a room) affects a signal can be represented by an impulse response.

In both speech and rooms, formants are characteristic features of the resonances of the space. They are said to be excited by acoustic sources such as the voice, and they shape (filter) the sources' sounds, but they are not sources themselves.

History

From an acoustic point of view, phonetics had a serious problem with the idea that the effective length of vocal tract changed vowels.[5] Indeed, when the length of the vocal tract changes, all the acoustic resonators formed by mouth cavities are scaled, and so are their resonance frequencies. Therefore, it was unclear how vowels could depend on frequencies when talkers with different vocal tract lengths, for instance bass and soprano singers, can produce sounds that are perceived as belonging to the same phonetic category. There had to be some way to normalize the spectral information underpinning the vowel identity. Hermann suggested a solution to this problem in 1894, coining the term “formant”. A vowel, according to him, is a special acoustic phenomenon, depending on the intermittent production of a special partial, or “formant”, or “characteristique” feature. The frequency of the “formant” may vary a little without altering the character of the vowel. For “long e” (ee or iy) for example, the lowest-frequency “formant” may vary from 350 to 440 Hz even in the same person.[6]

Phonetics

Average vowel formants for a male voice[7]
Vowel
(IPA)
Formant F1
(Hz)
Formant F2
(Hz)
Difference
F2F1
(Hz)
i 240 2400 2160
y 235 2100 1865
e 390 2300 1910
ø 370 1900 1530
ɛ 610 1900 1290
œ 585 1710 1125
a 850 1610 760
ɶ 820 1530 710
ɑ 750 940 190
ɒ 700 760 60
ʌ 600 1170 570
ɔ 500 700 200
ɤ 460 1310 850
o 360 640 280
ɯ 300 1390 1090
u 250 595 345

Formants are distinctive frequency components of the acoustic signal produced by speech, musical instruments[8] or singing. The information that humans require to distinguish between speech sounds can be represented purely quantitatively by specifying peaks in the frequency spectrum. Most of these formants are produced by tube and chamber resonance, but a few whistle tones derive from periodic collapse of Venturi effect low-pressure zones.[9]

The formant with the lowest frequency is called F1, the second F2, and the third F3. The fundamental frequency or pitch of the voice is sometimes referred to as F0, but it is not a formant. Most often the two first formants, F1 and F2, are sufficient to identify the vowel. The relationship between the perceived vowel quality and the first two formant frequencies can be appreciated by listening to "artificial vowels" that are generated by passing a click train (to simulate the glottal pulse train) through a pair of bandpass filters (to simulate vocal tract resonances). Front vowels have higher F2, while low vowels have higher F1. Lip rounding tends to lower F1 and F2 in back vowels and F2 and F3 in front vowels.[10]

Nasal consonants usually have an additional formant around 2500 Hz. The liquid [l] usually has an extra formant at 1500 Hz, whereas the English "r" sound ([ɹ]) is distinguished by a very low third formant (well below 2000 Hz).

Plosives (and, to some degree, fricatives) modify the placement of formants in the surrounding vowels. Bilabial sounds (such as /b/ and /p/ in "ball" or "sap") cause a lowering of the formants; on spectrograms, velar sounds (/k/ and /ɡ/ in English) almost always show F2 and F3 coming together in a 'velar pinch' before the velar and separating from the same 'pinch' as the velar is released; alveolar sounds (English /t/ and /d/) cause fewer systematic changes in neighbouring vowel formants, depending partially on exactly which vowel is present. The time course of these changes in vowel formant frequencies are referred to as 'formant transitions'.

In normal voiced speech, the underlying vibration produced by the vocal folds resembles a sawtooth wave, rich in harmonic overtones. If the fundamental frequency or (more often) one of the overtones is higher than a resonance frequency of the system, then the resonance will be only weakly excited and the formant usually imparted by that resonance will be mostly lost. This is most apparent in the case of soprano opera singers, who sing at pitches high enough that their vowels become very hard to distinguish.

Control of resonances is an essential component of the vocal technique known as overtone singing, in which the performer sings a low fundamental tone, and creates sharp resonances to select upper harmonics, giving the impression of several tones being sung at once.

Spectrograms may be used to visualise formants. In spectrograms, it can be hard to distinguish formants from naturally occurring harmonics when one sings. However, one can hear the natural formants in a vowel shape through atonal techniques such as vocal fry.

Formant estimation

Formants, whether they are seen as acoustic resonances of the vocal tract, or as local maxima in the speech spectrum, like band-pass filters, are defined by their frequency and by their spectral width (bandwidth).

Different methods exist to obtain this information. Formant frequencies, in their acoustic definition, can be estimated from the frequency spectrum of the sound, using a spectrogram (in the figure) or a spectrum analyzer. However, to estimate the acoustic resonances of the vocal tract (i.e. the speech definition of formants) from a speech recording, one can use linear predictive coding. An intermediate approach consists in extracting the spectral envelope by neutralizing the fundamental frequency,[11] and only then looking for local maxima in the spectral envelope.

Formant plots

Diagram of average vowel formants

The first two formants are important in determining the quality of vowels, and are frequently said to correspond to the open/close (or low/high) and front/back dimensions (which have traditionally been associated with the shape and position of the tongue). Thus the first formant F1 has a higher frequency for an open or low vowel such as [a] and a lower frequency for a closed or high vowel such as [i] or [u]; and the second formant F2 has a higher frequency for a front vowel such as [i] and a lower frequency for a back vowel such as [u].[12][13]

Vowels will almost always have four or more distinguishable formants, and sometimes more than six. However, the first two formants are the most important in determining vowel quality and are often plotted against each other in vowel diagrams,[14] though this simplification fails to capture some aspects of vowel quality such as rounding.[15]

Many writers have addressed the problem of finding an optimal alignment of the positions of vowels on formant plots with those on the conventional vowel quadrilateral. The pioneering work of Ladefoged[16] used the Mel scale because this scale was claimed to correspond more closely to the auditory scale of pitch than to the acoustic measure of fundamental frequency expressed in Hertz. Two alternatives to the Mel scale are the Bark scale and the ERB-rate scale.[17] Another widely adopted strategy is plotting the difference between F1 and F2 rather than F2 on the horizontal axis.[citation needed]

Singer's formant

Studies of the frequency spectrum of trained speakers and classical singers, especially male singers, indicate a clear formant around 3000 Hz (between 2800 and 3400 Hz) that is absent in speech or in the spectra of untrained speakers or singers. It is thought to be associated with one or more of the higher resonances of the vocal tract.[18][19] It is this increase in energy at 3000 Hz which allows singers to be heard and understood over an orchestra. This formant is actively developed through vocal training, for instance through so-called voce di strega or "witch's voice"[20] exercises and is caused by a part of the vocal tract acting as a resonator.[21] In classical music and vocal pedagogy, this phenomenon is also known as squillo.

See also

References

  1. Titze, I.R. (1994). Principles of Voice Production, Prentice Hall, ISBN:978-0-13-717893-3.
  2. Titze, I.R., Baken, R.J. Bozeman, K.W., Granqvist, S. Henrich, N., Herbst, C.T., Howard, D.M., Hunter, E.J., Kaelin, D., Kent, R.D., Löfqvist, A., McCoy, S., Miller, D.G., Noé, H., Scherer, R.C., Smith, J.R., Story, B.H., Švec, J.G., Ternström, S. and Wolfe, J. (2015) "Toward a consensus on symbolic notation of harmonics, resonances, and formants in vocalization." J. Acoust. Soc. America. 137, 3005–3007.
  3. Jeans, J.H. (1938) Science & Music, reprinted by Dover, 1968.
  4. Standards Secretariat, Acoustical Society of America, (1994). ANSI S1.1-1994 (R2004) American National Standard Acoustical Terminology, (12.41) Acoustical Society of America, Melville, NY.
  5. Hermann, Ludimar (1894) (in de). Phonophotographische Untersuchungen (5th ed.). 
  6. McKendrick, J. G. (1903). Experimental phonetics. In Annual report of the board of regents of the Smithsonian institution for the year ending June 30, 1902 (pp. 241–259). Smithsonian Institution.
  7. Catford, J.C. (1988) A Practical Introduction to Phonetics, Oxford University Press, p. 161. ISBN:978-0198242178
  8. Reuter, Christoph (2009): The role of formant positions and micro-modulations in blending and partial masking of musical instruments. In: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (JASA), Vol. 126,4, p. 2237
  9. Flanagan, James L. (1972) (in en). Speech Analysis Synthesis and Perception. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-01562-9. ISBN 978-3-662-01564-3. https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-662-01562-9. 
  10. Thomas, Erik R. (2011). Sociophonetics: An Introduction. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-230-22455-1. 
  11. Kawahara, Hideki; Masuda-Katsuse, Ikuyo; de Cheveigné, Alain (April 1999). "Restructuring speech representations using a pitch-adaptive time–frequency smoothing and an instantaneous-frequency-based F0 extraction: Possible role of a repetitive structure in sounds". Speech Communication 27 (3–4): 187–207. doi:10.1016/S0167-6393(98)00085-5. 
  12. Ladefoged, Peter (2006) A Course in Phonetics (Fifth Edition), Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth, p. 188. ISBN:1-4130-2079-8
  13. Ladefoged, Peter (2001) Vowels and Consonants: An Introduction to the Sounds of Language, Maldern, MA: Blackwell, p. 40. ISBN:0-631-21412-7
  14. Deterding, David (1997) 'The Formants of Monophthong Vowels in Standard Southern British English Pronunciation', Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 27, pp. 47–55.
  15. Hayward, Katrina (2000) Experimental Phonetics, Harlow, UK: Pearson, p. 149. ISBN:0-582-29137-2
  16. Ladefoged, P. (1967). Three Areas of Experimental Phonetics. Oxford. p. 87. 
  17. Hayward, K. (2000). Experimental Phonetics. Longman. ISBN 0-582-29137-2. 
  18. Sundberg, J. (1974). "Articulatory interpretation of the 'singing formant'", Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 55, 838–844.
  19. Bele, Irene Velsvik (December 2006). "The Speaker's Formant". J. Voice 20 (4): 555–578. doi:10.1016/j.jvoice.2005.07.001. PMID 16325374. 
  20. Frisell, Anthony (2007). Baritone Voice. Boston: Branden Books. pp. 84. ISBN 978-0-8283-2181-5. 
  21. Sundberg, Johan (1987). The science of the singing voice. DeKalb, Ill: Northern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-87580-542-6. 

External links