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1
Physiological and perceptual correlates of masculinity in children’s voices
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2
“This is what a mechanic sounds like.” Children’s vocal control reveals implicit occupational stereotypes
Cartei, Valentina; Oakhill, Jane; Garnham, Alan. - : SAGE Publications, 2020
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3
Children can control the expression of masculinity and femininity through the voice
Cartei, Valentina; Garnham, Alan; Oakhill, Jane. - : The Royal Society, 2019
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4
Neural representations of enhanced speech motor control in trained singers
Waters, Sheena; Kanber, Elise; Lavan, Nadine. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2019
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5
The role of sex-related voice variation in children’s gender-role stereotype attributions
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6
Children can control the expression of masculinity and femininity through the voice
Cartei, Valentina; Garnham, Alan; Oakhill, Jane. - : Royal Society, The, 2019
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7
Expression of gender in the human voice: investigating the “gender code”
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8
What makes a voice masculine: physiological and acoustical correlates of women's ratings of men's vocal masculinity
Cartei, Valentina; Bond, Rod; Reby, David. - : Elsevier, 2014
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9
The expression of gender through same and opposite-sex imitation in adult voices.
Abstract: The frequency components of the human voice play a major role in signaling the gender of the speaker. female voices are characterised by higher f0, higher formants and wider overall formant spacing (through VT shortening) than male voices. A voice imitation paradigm was used to investigate individuals knowledge and ability to make behavioural adjustments of these components in order to modulate their expression of voice gender. Twenty seven native American-English speakers were asked to read out loud vowels embedded in the /hVd/ context first using their normal voice, and then trying to sound as masculine or as feminine as possible. It was found that both men and women raise their F0 and shorten their vocal tract when feminising their voice, and lower their F0 and lengthen their vocal tract when masculinising their voice. These results, which indicate that speakers use behavioural strategies, within the biological constraints of speech production, to vary voice gender expression along a masculinity/femininity continuum, are discussed within the wider hypothesis of a "gender code" in the human voice.
URL: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/37245/
http://www.rug.nl/let/onderzoek/onderzoekinstituten/clcg/events/Exapp2010/Cartei_Reby_poster.pdf
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