
250px|thumb|Spectrogram of American English vowels showing the formants F1 and F2|class=skin-invert-image
250px|thumb|Spectrogram of American English vowels showing the formants F1 and F2|class=skin-invert-image
In speech science and phonetics, a formant is the broad spectral maximum that results from an acoustic resonance of the human vocal tract. In acoustics, a formant is usually defined as a broad peak, or local maximum, in the spectrum. For harmonic sounds, with this definition, the formant frequency is sometimes taken as that of the harmonic that is most augmented by a resonance. The difference between these two definitions resides in whether "formants" characterise the production mechanisms of a sound or the produced sound itself. In practice, the frequency of a spectral peak differs slightly from the associated resonance frequency, except when, by luck, harmonics are aligned with the resonance frequency, or when the sound source is mostly non-harmonic, as in whispering and vocal fry.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).