You can draw “target zones” on the pitch/loudness grid. When your voice stays inside the zone for 1.5 seconds, the app triggers a haptic or visual reward. This gamifies vocal control for Parkinson’s therapy or transgender voice training.
Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals rely heavily on visual cues. The real-time feedback loop provides immediate confirmation of pitch, intensity, and nasality that they may not be able to monitor auditorily. Neurogenic Speech Disorders speech viewer iii updated
| Feature | Original (c. 2000) | Updated Edition (2026) | |---------|-------------------|------------------------| | | CRT-friendly, monochrome | High-DPI, color themes, dark mode | | Pitch tracking | Basic LPC or autocorrelation | Deep learning F0 (CREPE-based) – works for singing & dysphonia | | Phoneme visualization | Static target boxes | Dynamic AI spectrogram + live phoneme recognition | | Session recording | None | Local encrypted video + audio with automatic annotation | | Remote therapy | No | Built-in telehealth mode (share only the visualizer, not video) | | Accessibility | Mouse/Keyboard | Voice commands, screen reader support, switch control | | Export | Print screen | CSV, PNG, video clips, and HL7/FHIR for EMR integration | You can draw “target zones” on the pitch/loudness grid
SpeechViewer III Updated: Evolution, Modern Solutions, and the Future of Visual Speech Therapy Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals rely heavily on visual
Offers simplified visual representations of frequency and intensity over time.
The updated Speech Viewer III addresses the limitations of older legacy software by introducing modern software architecture.
The original Speech Viewer III was a dedicated device (often paired with a headset microphone and a PC via serial or USB) designed for: