VocDoc, what happened to my voice? Towards automatically capturing vocal fatigue in the wild

Florian B. Pokorny*, Julian Linke, Nico Seddiki, Simon Julian Lohrmann, Claus Gerstenberger, Katja Haspl, Marlies Feiner, Martin Hagmüller, Barbara Schuppler, Gernot Kubin, Markus Gugatschka, Florian Eyben

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: Voice problems that arise during everyday vocal use can hardly be captured by standard outpatient voice assessments. In preparation for a digital health application to automatically assess longitudinal voice data ‘in the wild’ – the VocDoc, the aim of this paper was to study vocal fatigue from the speaker's perspective, the healthcare professional's perspective, and the ‘machine's’ perspective. Methods: We collected data of four voice healthy speakers completing a 90-min reading task. Every 10 min the speakers were asked about subjective voice characteristics. Then, we elaborated on the task of elapsed speaking time recognition: We carried out listening experiments with speech and language therapists and employed random forests on the basis of extracted acoustic features. We validated our models speaker-dependently and speaker-independently and analysed underlying feature importances. For an additional, clinical application-oriented scenario, we extended our dataset for lecture recordings of another two speakers. Results: Self- and expert-assessments were not consistent. With mean F1 scores up to 0.78, automatic elapsed speaking time recognition worked reliably in the speaker-dependent scenario only. A small set of acoustic features – other than features previously reported to reflect vocal fatigue – was found to universally describe long-term variations of the voice. Conclusion: Vocal fatigue seems to have individual effects across different speakers. Machine learning has the potential to automatically detect and characterise vocal changes over time. Significance: Our study provides technical underpinnings for a future mobile solution to objectively capture pathological long-term voice variations in everyday life settings and make them clinically accessible.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105595
JournalBiomedical Signal Processing and Control
Volume88
Issue numberB
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2024

Keywords

  • Digital health
  • Machine learning
  • Mobile application
  • Speech-language pathology
  • Vocal fatigue
  • Voice assessment
  • Voice features

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Signal Processing
  • Health Informatics
  • Biomedical Engineering

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'VocDoc, what happened to my voice? Towards automatically capturing vocal fatigue in the wild'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this