Variations on an automatic formant tracking strategy developed at Alberta will be compared to manual formant measurements from two databases of vowels spoken by men, women, and children (in Texas or Michigan). ‘‘Correct’’ vowel formant candidates for F1, F2, and F3 may be found roughly 85–90 percent of the time for adult male speakers using autocorrelation LPC with the following settings: F3 maximum at 3000 Hz, LPC order of 14, sampling rate of 10 kHz [J. Markel and A. Gray, Linear Prediction of Speech (Springer, New York, 1975)]. Experience shows good results are also often found with females’ and children’s speech, provided the sampling rate and F3 maximum are scaled appropriately for each speaker. Our new basic strategy involves analyzing each utterance at several distinct sampling rates and coordinated F3 cutoff frequencies with a fixed LPC order. Each scaling choice provides an independent set of candidates that is post‐processed by a simple tracking algorithm. A correlation measure between a spectro...