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Spectrograms are analytical tools, they don't convey the nature of sound: whether it's consonant or dissonant, cool or warm, pleasing or annoying. We could, and do, analyze pictures with 2D spectrograms, but hardly anyone would argue that those spectrograms are true representations of pictures. And that's the question I've been trying to answer: if spectrograms and waveforms aren't the true images of sound, then what is? On these ACF images, consonant frequencies produce regular patterns, that appear good due to their regular structure. High and low frequencies map to different colors, that appear to arrange themselves in a certain good looking way - this effect is surprising to me. The interesting observation here is that the good looking arrangements happen only for pleasing sounds. Different vowels, 29 total, taken from the Wikipedia's IPA table, produce different and distinct shapes - that's what I meant by "visual morphology". The ACF data can be presented in any form, it's just data after all, but I'm not interested in just information, I want the image to convey the "harmonic nature" of sound, and the polar coordinates happen to do this well. There is a link to demo there, and you can generate ACF images for any sounds you have, just make sure they are isolated 1-2 sec recordings. After looking at the images and listening to sounds that correspond to them, you'll quickly notice some pattern and will be able to guess the sound by looking at its image. |
But they do! It’s entirely possible for even inexperienced phoneticians to reconstruct speech given only a spectrogram — and it isn’t even that hard to do so. I cannot make any firm statements about these ACF images, but given that they present no temporal information, I find it difficult to imagine this being possible with them.
And as for ‘conveying the nature of sound’, I invite you to consider e.g. [0] or [1]. It’s easy to see on the spectrogram that some sounds are noisy, some are resonant, some are strong, some are weak, and so on.
[0] https://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~krussll/phonetics/acoustic/spe...
[1] https://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~robh/howto.html