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Research Article

Short-term effects of a speech feminization program for transgender women: listener perceptions, self-perception and satisfaction of the voice

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Published online: 27 Jul 2023
 

Abstract

Purpose: This study measured and compared the short-term impact of pitch elevation training (PET) and articulation-resonance training (ART) in transgender women, on self-perception, satisfaction and masculinity-femininity perceptions of listeners.

Methods: A randomized controlled study with cross-over design was used. Thirty transgender women were included and received fourteen weeks of speech training. All participants started with sham training (four weeks), after which they were randomly assigned to one of two groups: one group continued with PET (five weeks), followed by ART (five weeks), the second group received both trainings in opposite order. Participants were recorded four times, in between the training blocks: pre, post 1 (after sham), post 2 (after training 1) and post 3 (after training 2). Participants did a self-evaluation through the Trans Woman Voice Questionnaire (TWVQ) and visual analogues scales (VAS) concerning their self-perception and satisfaction. Two listening experiments (n = 75) were conducted researching the continuous masculinity-femininity rating (through a VAS) and categorical masculinity-femininity attribution.

Results and conclusions: Transgender women perceive their voices more feminine after the training and experience a positive impact on the vocal functioning and the voice-related impact on their daily life. However, a lot of the participants acknowledge that they need more speech training after ten weeks. Listeners rate the participants’ voices more feminine after training, both during the continuous and categorical questions. Higher femininity scores were detected during self-perception and listener perceptions after the combination of both ART and PET, compared to the separate trainings. No order effects were detected between ART and PET, both for self-perception and listener perceptions. Defining outcome predictors is crucial in future research.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

The author(s) reported there is no funding associated with the work featured in this article.

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