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Article Dans Une Revue Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Année : 2021

Speech breathing: variable but individual over time and according to limb movements

Résumé

Breathing is variable but also highly individual. Since the 1980s, evidence of a ventilatory personality has been observed in different physiological studies. This original term refers to within-speaker consistency in breathing characteristics across days or even years. Speech breathing is a specific way to control ventilation while supporting speech planning and phonation constraints. It is highly variable between speakers but also for the same speaker, depending on utterance properties, bodily actions, and the context of an interaction. Can we yet still observe consistency over time in speakers’ breathing profiles despite these variations? We addressed this question by analyzing the breathing profiles of 25 native speakers of German performing a narrative task on 2 days under different limb movement conditions. The individuality of breathing profiles over conditions and days was assessed by adopting methods used in physiological studies that investigated a ventilatory personality. Our results suggest that speaker-specific breathing profiles in a narrative task are maintained over days and that they stay consistent despite light physical activity. These results are discussed with a focus on better understanding what speech breathing individuality is, how it can be assessed, and the types of research perspectives that this concept opens up.
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Dates et versions

hal-03323837 , version 1 (04-01-2022)

Identifiants

Citer

Hélène Serré, Marion Dohen, Susanne Fuchs, Silvain Gerber, Amélie Rochet-Capellan. Speech breathing: variable but individual over time and according to limb movements. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2021, Special Issue: Annals Reports, 1505 (1), pp.142-155. ⟨10.1111/nyas.14672⟩. ⟨hal-03323837⟩
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