Many studies have been conducted on acoustic differences between female and male speech. However, they have generally been led on speakers of only one language, and have focused on a single acoustic parameter. The present study is an acoustic analysis of dissyllabic words or pseudo-words produced by 10 Northeastern American English speakers (5 females, 5 males) and 10 Parisian French speakers (5 females, 5 males). Several prosodic parameters were measured: mean f0, f0 range, phonation type (through H1- H2 intensity differences) and words’ duration. Significant cross-gender differences were obtained for each tested parameter. Moreover, cross-language variations were observed for f0 range, and H1-H2 differences. These results suggest that cross-gender acoustic differences are partly language-dependent and could be socially constructed.
Cite as: Pépiot, E. (2014) Male and female speech: a study of mean f0, f0 range, phonation type and speech rate in Parisian French and American English speakers. Proc. Speech Prosody 2014, 305-309, doi: 10.21437/SpeechProsody.2014-49
@inproceedings{pepiot14_speechprosody, author={Erwan Pépiot}, title={{Male and female speech: a study of mean f0, f0 range, phonation type and speech rate in Parisian French and American English speakers}}, year=2014, booktitle={Proc. Speech Prosody 2014}, pages={305--309}, doi={10.21437/SpeechProsody.2014-49} }