Publication | Closed Access
Investigating the role of glottal features in classifying clinical depression
43
Citations
6
References
2004
Year
Unknown Venue
PsychoacousticsMental HealthEmotion Related DisordersAcoustic Speech SignalPsychologySpeech RecognitionMood SymptomSubcortical Ischemic DepressionAudio AnalysisHealth SciencesClinical DepressionPsychiatryDepressionPsychiatric DisorderMood SpectrumSpeech CommunicationSpeech AnalysisVoiceMajor Depressive DisorderSpeech ProcessingGlottal WaveformNeuroscienceSpeech PerceptionMedicinePsychopathology
Classifying emotion and emotion related disorders in the voice have often been studied utilizing prosodic (pitch, energy, speaking rate) and other spectral characteristics (formants, power spectral density) of the acoustic speech signal. Glottal waveform features have received little attention in the study of many emotion and emotion related disorders, but have shown strong correlations in a variety of speech pattern studies including speaker characterization and stress analysis. We employ glottal extraction techniques to obtain features related to timing, ratios, shimmer, and spectral characteristics of the glottal waveform in the study of clinical depression. Our study reports on several glottal waveform features that show very good separation among a control group and patient group of males and females suffering from a depressive disorder.
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