Hester Gomez (soupdime1)
The method of rigorous coupled-wave analysis (RCWA) is developed to analyze the diffraction properties of acoustic parity-time-symmetric gratings. Asymmetric diffraction can be generated in these gratings, and the +1st order transmitted wave is suppressed completely at the diffraction vanishing point (DVP). The influence factors of the modulation ratio of the DVP, including the modulation amplitude and modulation approach, are systematically discussed using the method of RCWA. Two-beam diffraction with Bragg incident angle is studied in detail. The results show that the modulation ratio of the DVP changes with the modulation amplitude differently for different modulation approaches. The attenuation or enhancement of the sound energy depends on the sign of incident angle and the modulation ratio.A speech production experiment with electroglottography investigated how voicing is affected by consonants of differing degrees of constriction. Measures of glottal contact [closed quotient (CQ)] and strength of voicing [strength of excitation (SoE)] were used in conditional inference tree analyses. Broadly, the results show that as the degree of constriction increases, both CQ and SoE values decrease, indicating breathier and weaker voicing. Similar changes in voicing quality are observed throughout the course of the production of a given segment. Implications of these results for a greater understanding of source-tract interactions and for the phonological notion of sonority are discussed.The underwater noise emission from glacier calving is investigated by integrating acoustic and photographic observations made in a glacial bay and model pool. Similarities in the impact noise in these two settings are identified. Distinct fluid-dynamics processes are involved in sound generation iceberg detachment, water entry, entrainment and collective oscillation of a bubble cloud, secondary impacts due to splashes, and calving-induced wave action. The lag between initial impact and bubble plume pinch-off from the subsurface cavity depends on ice block dimensions and drop height and may be useful in reducing errors in estimates of calving fluxes made using underwater sound.This paper investigates infants' and adults' use of envelope cues and combined onset asynchrony and envelope cues in the segregation of concurrent vowels. Listeners heard superimposed vowel pairs consisting of two different vowels spoken by a male and a female talker and were trained to respond to one specific target vowel, either the male /u/ or male /i/. Vowel detection was measured in three conditions. In the baseline condition the two superimposed vowels had similar amplitude envelopes and synchronous onset. In the envelope cue condition, the amplitude envelopes of the two vowels differed. In the combined cue condition, both the onset time and amplitude envelopes of the two vowels differed. Seven-month-old infants' concurrent vowel segregation improved both with envelope and with combined onset asynchrony and envelope cues to the same extent as adults'. read more A preliminary investigation with 3-month-old infants suggested that neither envelope cues nor combined asynchrony and envelope cues improved their ability to detect the target vowel. Taken together, these results suggest that envelope and combined onset-asynchrony cues are available to infants as they attempt to process competing speech sounds, at least after 7 months of age.The Reflections series takes a look back on historical articles from The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America that have had a significant impact on the science and practice of acoustics.Despite possessing an increased perceptual significance, near-field head-related transfer functions (nf-HRTFs) are more difficult to acquire compared to far-field head-related transfer functions. If properly validated, numerical simulations could be employed to estimate nf-HRTFs the present study aims to validate the usage of wave-based simulations in