Mat-1.3656 Seminar on numerical analysis and computational science

Monday, March 3, 2014, room M233 at 14.15, Eirola & Stenberg

Tiina Murtola, Aalto", Department of Mathematics and Systems Analysis

Modelling vowel production

In this talk, a tunable vowel synthesis model, which can be used as glottal pulse generator for more sophisticated acoustic simulators of the vocal tract, is described and tested. The core of the model consists of a low-order mass-spring model of the vocal folds, Bernoulli flow with a viscous pressure loss in the glottis, and a Webster resonator to represent the vocal tract. With the aim of producing a minimal model, the impact of adding dissipation along the vocal tract, a subglottal tract resonator, and turbulence losses in the glottis, is investigated.

Tunability is achieved by optimising four selected parameters in order to achieve target fundamental frequency and phonation type. Solving the multi-objective optimisation problem directly is not practical due to the complicated dynamic behaviour of the model and long computing time of each simulation. Instead, a three-step procedure combining constrained single-objective optimisation, parameter space exploration, and manual pulse shape selection is introduced and tested.