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speechvoice

Speechvoice is the characteristic sound of spoken language produced by the human vocal apparatus that listeners perceive as voice identity, tone, and emotion. The term can refer to a speaker's natural vocal quality as well as the distinct voices produced by speech synthesis systems. A speechvoice includes both physiological production and acoustic realization of speech, combining phonation, resonant filtering, and prosody.

The main components include phonation (how the vocal folds vibrate), pitch or fundamental frequency (perceived highness

In perception, listeners extract identity, gender cues, age, emotion, and intent from speechvoice. In language technology,

Disorders of the voice, or dysphonia, affect quality and stability of the speech voice and may require

or
lowness),
loudness,
and
timbre
(spectral
qualities
that
give
color
to
the
voice).
Prosody—intonation,
rhythm,
stress,
and
tempo—modulates
meaning
and
emotion
beyond
the
spoken
words.
Voice
quality
features
such
as
breathiness,
creakiness,
or
harshness
also
shape
perception.
Variation
arises
from
anatomy,
health,
training
(e.g.,
singing),
linguistic
background,
and
stylistic
choice.
a
"speechvoice"
often
refers
to
a
synthetic
voice
produced
by
text-to-speech
systems
or
voice
conversion,
where
a
voice
model
or
voice
font
is
chosen
to
simulate
a
particular
character
or
personality.
Modern
systems
use
neural
networks
to
generate
natural-sounding
human-like
voices.
medical
assessment.
Voice
care
and
therapy
aim
to
preserve
clarity,
range,
and
health
across
speech
and
singing
contexts.