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In mechanics, when one observes a rigid body in rotational motion with constant angular acceleration, it is possible to establish equations for its rotational kinematics. This process resembles how linear kinematics are dealt with in simpler motion studies.
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Comparing Two Smoothing Approaches in Estimating Kinematic Parameters.

Stephan R Kuberski1, Adamantios I Gafos1

  • 1Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Sciences, University of Potsdam, Germany.

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|April 4, 2024
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Spline smoothing significantly reduces errors in speech kinematic parameter estimation compared to digital filtering. This highlights splines as a superior method for speech analysis, aligning with findings in human movement science.

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Area of Science:

  • Speech science
  • Human movement science

Background:

  • Digital filtering with finite differences is common in speech analysis.
  • Spline smoothing is prevalent in human movement science for signal processing.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Compare digital filtering and spline smoothing for speech signal processing.
  • Evaluate kinematic parameter estimation accuracy using both methods.
  • Assess conformity to known parameter relationships via regression analysis.

Main Methods:

  • Applied digital filtering (finite differences) and spline smoothing to speech signals.
  • Estimated kinematic parameters using both smoothing techniques.
  • Performed regression analyses to compare parameter estimations against established laws.

Main Results:

  • Spline smoothing yielded substantially smaller regression errors.
  • Digital filtering showed larger errors in parameter estimation.
  • The superiority of splines was evident in speech data analysis.

Conclusions:

  • Spline smoothing is a more accurate method for speech kinematic analysis.
  • Findings support the broader applicability of splines beyond human movement science.
  • This study validates spline smoothing's effectiveness in the speech domain.