Phonetik und Sprachverarbeitung
print

Links und Funktionen
Sprachumschaltung

Navigationspfad


Inhaltsbereich

Publications

This is a searchable list of publications of scientists working at or associated with the Institute of Phonetics and Speech Processing. You can choose to sort the list by year or by publication type.

The complete list in BibTeX format can be downloaded here:
Download list of publications (bibtex)

The “Research Reports of the Institute of Phonetics and Speech Communications” (FIPKM, “Forschungseberichte des Instituts für Phonetik und Sprachliche Kommunikation“) were edited and published for 39 volumes until the series was discontinued in 2002. Some of the volumes published between 1996 and 2002 are available online. Others are available in print at request.
More information


Search


Regular expression, case-insensitive, matched against all BibTeX fields (author, title, etc.)


One or more years or ranges of years, e. g.
1993
1995-1998
08-
-99,02-06,14-





Reference

Carignan, C. (2018). Using Naïve Listener Imitations of Native Speaker Productions to Investigate Mechanisms of Listener-Based Sound Change. Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology, 9(1), 1-31.

BibTeX

@article{carignanUsingNaiveListener2018,
  title = {Using Na{\"i}ve Listener Imitations of Native Speaker Productions to Investigate Mechanisms of Listener-Based Sound Change},
  author = {Carignan, Christopher},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Laboratory Phonology: Journal of the Association for Laboratory Phonology},
  volume = {9},
  number = {1},
  pages = {1--31},
  doi = {10.5334/labphon.136},
  abstract = {This study was designed to test whether listener-based sound change---listener misperception (Ohala, 1981, 1993) and perceptual cue re-weighting (Beddor, 2009, 2012)---can be observed synchronically in a laboratory setting. Co-registered articulatory data (degree of nasalization, tongue height, breathiness) and acoustic data (F1 frequency) related to the productions of phonemic oral and nasal vowels of Southern French were first collected from four native speakers, and the acoustic recordings were subsequently presented to nine Australian English na{\"i}ve listeners, who were instructed to imitate the native productions. During these imitations, similar articulatory and acoustic data were collected in order to compare the articulatory strategies used by the two groups. The results suggest that the imitators successfully reproduced the acoustic distinctions made by the native speakers, but that they did so using different articulatory strategies. The articulatory strategies for the vowel pair /{\~ɑ}/-/a/ suggest that listeners (at least partially) misperceived F1-lowering due to nasalization and breathiness as being due to tongue height. Additional evidence supports perceptual cue re-weighting, in that the na{\"i}ve imitators used nasalance less, and tongue height more, in order to obtain the same F1 nasal-oral distinctions that the native speakers had originally produced.}
}

Powered by bibtexbrowser