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

Kirby, J. (2021). Incorporating Tone in the Calculation of Phonotactic Probability. In Proceedings of the 18th SIGMORPHON Workshop on Computational Research in Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology (pp. 32-38).

BibTeX

@inproceedings{kirbyIncorporatingToneCalculation2021,
  title = {Incorporating Tone in the Calculation of Phonotactic Probability},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 18th {{SIGMORPHON Workshop}} on {{Computational Research}} in {{Phonetics}}, {{Phonology}}, and {{Morphology}}},
  author = {Kirby, James},
  editor = {Garrett, Nicolai and Gorman, Kyle and Cotterell, Ryan},
  year = {2021},
  pages = {32--38},
  publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics},
  doi = {10.18653/v1/2021.sigmorphon-1.4},
  abstract = {This paper investigates how the ordering of tone relative to the segmental string influences the calculation of phonotactic probability. Trigram and recurrent neural network models were trained on syllable lexicons of four Asian syllable-tone languages (Mandarin, Thai, Vietnamese, and Cantonese) in which tone was treated as a segment occurring in different positions in the string. For trigram models, the optimal permutation interacted with language, while neural network models were relatively unaffected by tone position in all languages. In addition to providing a baseline for future evaluation, these results suggest that phonotactic probability is robust to choices of how tone is ordered with respect to other elements in the syllable.},
  annotation = {Supplementary materials https://osf.io/na5fb/}
}

Powered by bibtexbrowser