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The Curious Case of Impersonators and Singers: Telling voices apart and telling voices together under Naturally Challenging Listening Conditions

The Curious Case of Impersonators and Singers: Telling voices apart and telling voices together under Naturally Challenging Listening Conditions
The Curious Case of Impersonators and Singers: Telling voices apart and telling voices together under Naturally Challenging Listening Conditions
Vocal identity processing depends on the ability to tell apart two instances of different speakers whilst also being able to tell together two instances of the same speaker. Whilst previous research has examined these voice processing capabilities under relatively common listening conditions, it has not yet tested the limits of these capabilities. Here, two studies are presented which employ challenging listening tasks to determine just how good we are at these voice processing tasks. In Experiment 1, 54 University students were asked to distinguish between very similar sounding yet different speakers (celebrity targets and their impersonators). Participants completed a ‘Same/Different’ task and a ‘Which is the Celebrity?’ task to pairs of speakers, and a ‘Real or Not?’ task to individual speakers. In Experiment 2, a separate group of 40 University students was asked to pair very different sounding instances of the same speakers (speaking and singing). Participants were presented with an array of voice clips and completed a ‘Pairs Task’ as a variant of the more traditional voice sorting task. The results of Experiment 1 suggested that significantly more mistakes were made when distinguishing celebrity targets from their impersonators than when distinguishing the same targets from control voices. Nevertheless, listeners were significantly better than chance in all three tasks despite the challenge. Similarly, the results of Experiment 2 suggested that it was significantly more difficult to pair singing and speaking clips than to pair two speaking clips, particularly when speakers were unfamiliar. Again, however, performance was significantly above zero, and was again better than chance in a cautious comparison. Taken together, the results suggest that vocal identity processing is a highly adaptable task, assisted by familiarity with the speaker. However, the fact that performance remained above chance in all tasks suggested that we had not reached the limit of our listeners’ capability despite the considerable listening challenges introduced. We conclude that voice processing is far better than earlier research might have presumed.
Voice identity; Telling voices together and apart; Impersonator voices; Singing voices; Natural listening challenge; Identity regions.
2076-3425
Stevenage, Sarah
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Singh, Lucy
2f4d34e7-1396-4b35-96c5-82bef2b4e0f9
Dixey, Pru
f1e2f20b-7c8c-427f-ae48-caa59e4e60e6
Stevenage, Sarah
493f8c57-9af9-4783-b189-e06b8e958460
Singh, Lucy
2f4d34e7-1396-4b35-96c5-82bef2b4e0f9
Dixey, Pru
f1e2f20b-7c8c-427f-ae48-caa59e4e60e6

Stevenage, Sarah, Singh, Lucy and Dixey, Pru (2023) The Curious Case of Impersonators and Singers: Telling voices apart and telling voices together under Naturally Challenging Listening Conditions. Brain Sciences, 13. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Vocal identity processing depends on the ability to tell apart two instances of different speakers whilst also being able to tell together two instances of the same speaker. Whilst previous research has examined these voice processing capabilities under relatively common listening conditions, it has not yet tested the limits of these capabilities. Here, two studies are presented which employ challenging listening tasks to determine just how good we are at these voice processing tasks. In Experiment 1, 54 University students were asked to distinguish between very similar sounding yet different speakers (celebrity targets and their impersonators). Participants completed a ‘Same/Different’ task and a ‘Which is the Celebrity?’ task to pairs of speakers, and a ‘Real or Not?’ task to individual speakers. In Experiment 2, a separate group of 40 University students was asked to pair very different sounding instances of the same speakers (speaking and singing). Participants were presented with an array of voice clips and completed a ‘Pairs Task’ as a variant of the more traditional voice sorting task. The results of Experiment 1 suggested that significantly more mistakes were made when distinguishing celebrity targets from their impersonators than when distinguishing the same targets from control voices. Nevertheless, listeners were significantly better than chance in all three tasks despite the challenge. Similarly, the results of Experiment 2 suggested that it was significantly more difficult to pair singing and speaking clips than to pair two speaking clips, particularly when speakers were unfamiliar. Again, however, performance was significantly above zero, and was again better than chance in a cautious comparison. Taken together, the results suggest that vocal identity processing is a highly adaptable task, assisted by familiarity with the speaker. However, the fact that performance remained above chance in all tasks suggested that we had not reached the limit of our listeners’ capability despite the considerable listening challenges introduced. We conclude that voice processing is far better than earlier research might have presumed.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 February 2023
Keywords: Voice identity; Telling voices together and apart; Impersonator voices; Singing voices; Natural listening challenge; Identity regions.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475438
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475438
ISSN: 2076-3425
PURE UUID: 180bae22-292e-4c73-8950-08badfe21a4d
ORCID for Sarah Stevenage: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4155-2939

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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2023 17:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:40

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Contributors

Author: Sarah Stevenage ORCID iD
Author: Lucy Singh
Author: Pru Dixey

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