1. Format characteristics of human laughter
- Author
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Szameitat DP, Darwin, CJ, Szameitat, AJ, Wildgruber, D, Sterr, AM, Dietrich, S, and Alter, K
- Subjects
Male ,Sound Spectrography ,Time Factors ,Laughter ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Speech recognition ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,LPN and LVN ,Speech Acoustics ,Speech and Hearing ,Nonverbal communication ,Sex Factors ,Formant ,Phonation ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Vowel ,Humans ,Female ,Larynx ,Psychology ,Jaw opening ,Articulation (phonetics) ,Vocal tract ,media_common - Abstract
Although laughter is an important aspect of nonverbal vocalization, its acoustic properties are still not fully understood. Extreme articulation during laughter production, such as wide jaw opening, suggests that laughter can have very high first formant (F(1)) frequencies. We measured fundamental frequency and formant frequencies of the vowels produced in the vocalic segments of laughter. Vocalic segments showed higher average F(1) frequencies than those previously reported and individual values could be as high as 1100 Hz for male speakers and 1500 Hz for female speakers. To our knowledge, these are the highest F(1) frequencies reported to date for human vocalizations, exceeding even the F(1) frequencies reported for trained soprano singers. These exceptionally high F(1) values are likely to be based on the extreme positions adopted by the vocal tract during laughter in combination with physiological constraints accompanying the production of a "pressed" voice.
- Published
- 2011