PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

A twangy timbre cuts through the noise

Among loud noise, a brassy and bright voice can help speakers be understood

2025-07-29
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, July 29, 2025 — Twangy voices are a hallmark of country music and many regional accents. However, this speech type, often described as “brassy” and “bright,” can also be used to get a message across in a noisy environment.

In JASA Express Letters, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, researchers from Indiana University found that it was easier to understand twangy female voices compared to neutral voices when surrounded by noise.

Found in accents in American cities such as Chicago, Boston, New York, and Dallas, “twangy” voices are used by speech pathologists to help increase their understandability when working with patients.

“While the acoustic properties of twangy voice have been studied for their potential to enhance intelligibility, the perceptual effect of twangy timbre on speech intelligibility is not well understood,” said author Tzu-Pei Tsai. “This lack of evidence has led to clinicians' hesitance in recommending a twangy voice for therapy, and the major motivation for our study is so we can provide speech-language pathologists with the confidence to use this tool.”

To explore this, the researchers recruited four male and four female participants to record twangy speech samples, which they then used to create a text-to-speech system that could be used in the experiments. The generated speech samples were then played over noisy environment sounds, which were created from ambient train and plane recordings.

Participants listened to both male and female twangy speakers and neutral speakers, then rated their listening efforts and how well they could understand the spoken words. The researchers found that in general, twangy voices were understood more than neutral voices, but participants had the easiest time understanding twangy female voices.

This could arise thanks to a few reasons — firstly, twangy speech is usually higher-pitched than neutral speech, giving it a perceived loudness. It is also less masked by low-frequency sounds such as traffic noises.

In the future, the researchers want to explore the impact of twangy speech on intelligibility in different noise environments.

“We would also like to explore the clinical applicability of twang in voice therapy, including its social perception and the effort required for its production,” Tsai said.

###

The article “How vocal timbre impacts word identification and listening effort in traffic-shaped noises” is authored by Tzu-Pei Tsai, Tessa Bent, and Malachi Henry. It will appear in JASA Express Letters on July 29, 2025 (DOI: 10.1121/10.0037043). After that date, it can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0037043.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

JASA Express Letters is a gold open-access journal devoted to the rapid and open dissemination of important new research results and technical discussion in all fields of acoustics. It serves physical scientists, life scientists, engineers, psychologists, physiologists, architects, musicians, and speech communication specialists who wish to quickly report the results of their acoustical research in letter-sized contributions. See https://pubs.aip.org/asa/jel.

ABOUT ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

The Acoustical Society of America (ASA) is the premier international scientific society in acoustics devoted to the science and technology of sound. Its 7,000 members worldwide represent a broad spectrum of the study of acoustics. ASA publications include The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (the world's leading journal on acoustics), JASA Express Letters, Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Acoustics Today magazine, books, and standards on acoustics. The society also holds two major scientific meetings each year. See https://acousticalsociety.org/.

###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How does the immune system prepare for breastfeeding?

2025-07-29
LA JOLLA (July 29, 2025)—Of the 3.6 million babies born in the United States each year, around 80 percent begin breastfeeding in their first month of life. Breastfeeding has known benefits for both mother and child, reducing maternal risk of breast and ovarian cancers, type 2 diabetes, and high blood pressure, while simultaneously supporting the baby’s nutrition and immune system. But because pregnancy and lactation have been historically understudied, we still don’t understand the science behind many of these benefits. Salk Institute immunologists are changing that—starting with a map of ...

Trends in medical and nonmedical use of prescription stimulants among US adolescents

2025-07-29
About The Study: Among U.S. adolescents, current medical use of prescription stimulants for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) increased between 2005 and 2023, while nonmedical use decreased. Lifetime nonmedical use was more prevalent than medical use in early cohorts but shifted to being less prevalent in recent cohorts. These findings are consistent with declines in peer-to-peer diversion among adolescents following COVID-related school closures and findings from adult studies.  Corresponding ...

Trapping gut bacteria’s hidden fuel improves blood sugar and liver health, study shows

2025-07-29
A team of Canadian scientists has discovered a surprising new way to improve blood sugar levels and reduce liver damage: by trapping a little-known fuel made by gut bacteria before they wreak havoc on the body. The findings, published in Cell Metabolism on July 29, 2025, could open the door to new therapies to treat metabolic diseases like type 2 diabetes and fatty liver disease. Researchers at McMaster University, Université Laval and the University of Ottawa showed that a molecule produced by microbes in ...

Uncovering how a molecule responsible for immune “brakes” directs skin defenses

2025-07-29
Weill Cornell Medicine researchers have discovered that PD-1—a molecule best known for putting the brakes on immune cells—also plays a critical role in helping T cells become long-term immune defenders in the skin. Early during infection, PD-1 acts like a steering wheel, guiding T cells to become protective resident memory T cells (TRM) that stay in place. These cells remember invading germs or cancer and quickly mount a response if that enemy reappears. The preclinical findings, published July 29 ...

miRNA dysregulation of AGE/RAGE pathway in metabolic syndrome: a novel analysis strategy utilizing miRNA-profiling data

2025-07-29
Metabolic Syndrome (MetS), characterized by abdominal obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and insulin resistance, represents a global health crisis with escalating prevalence. Its comorbidities—including type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), atherosclerosis, and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)—share underlying molecular pathways. Among these, the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) and its ligands (AGEs, HMGB1, S100 proteins) form the AGE/RAGE axis, a key driver of inflammation, oxidative stress, and tissue damage in MetS. While targeting this axis is a promising therapeutic strategy, ...

AI catches one-third of interval breast cancers missed at screening

2025-07-29
OAK BROOK, Ill. – An AI algorithm for breast cancer screening has potential to enhance the performance of digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT), reducing interval cancers by up to one-third, according to a study published today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).   Interval breast cancers—symptomatic cancers diagnosed within a period between regular screening mammography exams—tend to have poorer outcomes due to their more aggressive biology and rapid growth. DBT, or 3D mammography, can improve visualization of breast lesions and reveal cancers that may be obscured by dense tissue. Because DBT is ...

Researchers advocate for separate roles between AI and humans

2025-07-29
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Renowned physician-scientist Eric J. Topol, M.D., and Harvard artificial intelligence (AI) expert Pranav Rajpurkar, Ph.D., advocate for a clear separation of the roles between AI systems and radiologists in an editorial published today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). “We’re stuck between distrust and dependence, and missing out on the full potential of AI,” said Dr. Rajpurkar, associate professor of Biomedical Informatics at Harvard University. The ...

SwRI expands antenna testing capabilities with spherical near-field range

2025-07-29
SAN ANTONIO — July 29, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) is expanding its antenna measurement capabilities with a state-of-the-art spherical near-field antenna range. The 1,260-square-foot indoor range, lined with radio frequency and microwave foam absorbers, is equipped to accurately sample the near field of an antenna. Near-field measurements can be mathematically transformed into far-field data. “Near field” refers to the complex electromagnetic fields close to the antenna, while the “far field” encompasses the predictable ...

The complex relationship between fusion fuel and lithium walls

2025-07-29
Lithium is considered a key ingredient in the future commercial fusion power plants known as tokamaks, and there are several ways to use this metal to enhance the process. But a key question remained: How much does it impact the amount of fuel trapped in the walls of tokamaks? According to new research from a global collaboration spanning nine institutions, the dominant driver of fuel retention is co-deposition: a process where fuel is trapped alongside lithium. Co-deposition can happen with lithium that is directly added during plasma operations, ...

Study refutes blood thinner brain bleed risk after falls in older adults

2025-07-29
There are about 70 million baby boomers in the United States, many now over age 65. As people age, rates of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases rise, leading to more use of blood thinners such as warfarin. At the same time, older adults face a higher risk of head injuries and brain bleeding, especially after falls. Falls are the leading cause of injury and death in older adults, causing 38,000 deaths and 3 million emergency department visits in 2021. The health care cost for non-fatal falls in this group reached $80 billion in 2020, up sharply from 2015. While anticoagulants protect against heart and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Artificial tongue uses milk to determine heat level in spicy foods

IU Kelley Futurecast: AI and energy infrastructure may buoy US economy in 2026

The biggest threats to maintaining fat bike trails: climate change and volunteer burnout

AI models for drug design fail in physics

Practice pattern of aerosol drug therapy in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients: An aero-in-ICU study

GLIS model as a predictor of outcomes in older adults with heart failure

Molecules in motion: pioneering the era of supramolecular robotics

Faster and more reliable crystal structure prediction of organic molecules

Thankful at work: A two-week gratitude journal boosts employee engagement

Fibroblasts: Hidden drivers of heart failure progression

IOCB Prague unveils a fundamentally faster, more affordable way to produce quantum nanodiamonds

Artificial intelligence takes the lead in revolutionizing cancer research explored at NFCR’s 2025 Global Summit and Award Ceremonies for Cancer Research and Entrepreneurship.

Switching memories on and off with epigenetics

This is your brain without sleep

3D DNA looping discovery in rice paves the way for higher yields with less fertilizer

Four subgroups of PCOS open up for individualized treatment

Perovskites reveal ultrafast quantum light in new study

New clues on how physical forces spread in neurons

Heart ‘blueprint’ reveals origins of defects and insights into fetal development

Some acute and chronic viral infections may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease

Flavanols in cocoa can protect blood vessel function following uninterrupted sitting - study

$100 Million gift will advance UCSF’s dementia research and care

The 4th Japan-India Universities Forum on 15 November

Arctic town Kiruna is colder after the move

Mayo Clinic study finds majority of midlife women with menopause symptoms do not seek care

Underwater robot ‘Lassie’ discovers remarkable icefish nests during search for Shackleton’s lost ship off Antarctica

Wearable robots you can wear like clothes: automatic weaving of “fabric muscle” brings commercialization closer

Researcher improves century-old equation to predict movement of dangerous air pollutants.

Heatwaves linked to rise in sleep apnoea cases in Europe

Down‑top strategy engineered large‑scale fluorographene/PBO nanofibers composite papers with excellent wave‑transparent performance and thermal conductivity

[Press-News.org] A twangy timbre cuts through the noise
Among loud noise, a brassy and bright voice can help speakers be understood