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Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 9:13 pm
by steve
How about reversing the sound?
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Sun Oct 16, 2011 10:03 pm
by Trebor
kozikowski wrote:It's amazing. Even with some weapons-grade damage to the monolog, you can still make out some of the words.Koz
True of sine-speech, once you've heard it a few times ...
http://www.mrc-cbu.cam.ac.uk/people/mat ... ve-speech/
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Mon Oct 17, 2011 9:12 am
by MinHooi
Hi Steve - Reversing the sound? How?
Trebor - the sine-wave speech link is very helpful. I can only hope that my participants are naive to everything. Unlikely

The change in waveform which subsequently change the frequency is not good too. It will remove the emotional tone, while trying to remove the words.
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Mon Oct 17, 2011 9:56 am
by Trebor
MinHooi wrote: Reversing the sound? How?
"Reverse" (i.e. backwards) is in Effect menu ...
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Mon Oct 17, 2011 5:33 pm
by steve
You could also select one word at a time and use the Reverse effect, which will produce something like this:
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Wed Oct 19, 2011 7:36 pm
by steve
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Wed Oct 19, 2011 11:50 pm
by MinHooi
Hi, I tried reversing the speech. I gave it to a person to try, and he laughed out loud. Didn't even notice that there was anger tone. So, not good.
Thanks to Koz, Trebor and Steve for trying to help me. I will just have to figure something out.
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Sun Oct 23, 2011 11:45 am
by steve
Bhasel wrote: If it was about image, not sound, I'd suggest applying 'smudgung' effect to it. I guess there must be something similar to do with sound.
That's a good idea.
A similar technique with audio would be to add a lot of "delay" or "reverb". I think the problem with this approach will be that when the effect is strong enough to disguise what is being said, the sound will not be recognisable as speech (it'll sound like an engine in a metal pipe) though the long term spectrum will be almost the same.
I think the interesting thing that has come out of looking at this question is the huge amount of damage that can be done to speech before it becomes incomprehensible.
MinHooi wrote:I have some audio clips taken from a movie, and had it edited to 10-seconds. I want my participants to judge the emotional tone of that clip, and not rely on the semantics to judge.
How about obtaining some samples from a foreign language film?
Re: Removing words from speech, and maintaining the tone
Posted: Sun Oct 23, 2011 1:34 pm
by Trebor
steve wrote:I think the interesting thing that has come out of looking at this question is the huge amount of damage that can be done to speech before it becomes incomprehensible.
LPC10 relies on that : it's the bare bones of speech ...
[LPC10 via
SoX, very
speak-n-spell]