Wearing an oxygen mask changes the speech production of speakers. It
indeed modifies the vocal apparatus and perturbs the articulatory movements
of the speaker. This paper studies the impact of the oxygen mask of
military aircraft pilots on formant trajectories, both dynamically
(variations of the formants at a utterance level) and globally (mean
value at the utterance level) for 12 speakers.
A comparative analysis
of speech collected with and without an oxygen mask shows that the
mask has a significant impact on the formant trajectories, both on
the mean values and on the formant variations at the utterance level.
This impact is strongly dependent on the speaker and also on the mask
model. These observations suggest that the articulatory movements of
the speaker are modified by the presence of the mask.
These observations
are validated via a preliminary ASR experiment that uses a data augmentation
technique based on articulatory perturbations that are driven by our
experimental observations.