英文摘要 |
The purpose of the study was to investigate the optimal octaves for Mandarin phonemes. Sixty college students were randomly selected from those who passed on hearing sensitivity. The subjects listened to filtered phonemes while they adjusted center frequencies of the filtered bands on the SUVAG LINGUA (System Universal Verbo-Tonal Audition). The optimal octave was defined as the band which produced the most similar sound like the unfiltered phoneme. The main findings were summarized as follows: The optimal octave for each phoneme was centered on one or two frequencies. The optimal octave for nasals was lower than the similar one in English. The speech perception and identification for phonemes were focused on the optimal octaves through 180 to 4000 Hz. The optimal octaves for vowels were distributed at a wide range. Diphthongs can be perceived clearly in the ceter frequencies of 710, 1000, 1400, and 2000 Hz. The compound vowels tended to centralize in the center frequency of 1400 Hz. The tonality for voiced phonemes /t/、/t'/、/ts'/ were higher than their voiceless counterparts, but other consonants did not show the same characteristics. Affricates and nasals had the highest and the lowest tonality, respectively. Foundamental frequency was not the crucial factor for tonality judgement. The optimal octaves for vowels could be perceived through the frequency ranges of F1, F2 and F3. |