Background. Evidence across a range of musically trained, hearing disordered and voice disordered populations present conflicting results regarding the relationship between pitch discrimination (PD) and
voice quality. PD characteristics of female speakers with and without a musical training background and no selfreported voice disorder, and the relationship between PD and voice quality in this particular population, have
not been investigated.
Aims. To evaluate PD characteristics in a cohort of female participants without a self-reported voice disorder
and the relationship between PD and acoustic voice measures.
Method. One hundred fourteen female participants were studied, all of whom self-reported as being non-voice
disordered. All completed the Newcastle Assessment of Pitch Discrimination which involved a two-tone PD task.
Their voices were recorded producing standardized vocal tasks. Voice samples were acoustically analyzed for frequency-domain measures (fundamental frequency and its standard deviation, and harmonics-to-noise ratio) and
spectral-domain measures (cepstral peak prominence and the Cepstral/Spectral Index of Dysphonia). Data were
analyzed for the whole cohort and for musical and non-musical training backgrounds.
Results. In the whole cohort, there were no significant correlations between PD and acoustic voice measures.
PD accuracy in musically trained speakers was better than in non-trained speakers and correlated with fundamental frequency standard deviation in prolonged vowel tasks. Vocalists demonstrated superior PD accuracy
and fundamental frequency standard deviation in prolonged vowels compared to instrumentalists but did not
show significant correlations between PD and acoustic measures. The Newcastle Assessment of Pitch Discrimination was a reliable tool, showing moderate-good prediction value in differentiating musical background.
Conclusions. There was little evidence of a relationship between PD and acoustic measures of voice quality,
regardless of musical training background and superior PD accuracy among the musically trained. These data do
not support ideas concerning the co-development of perception and action among individuals identified as having
voice quality measures within normal ranges. Numerous measures of voice quality, including measures sensitive
to pitch, did not distinguish across musically and non-musically trained individuals, despite individual differences
in pitch discrimination