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The Advantage of Knowing the Talker
Souza, Pamela [Sonstige]; Gehani, Namita [Sonstige]; Wright, Richard [Sonstige]. - 2020
DNB Subject Category Language
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2
cldf-datasets/phoible: PHOIBLE 2.0 as CLDF dataset ...
Moran, Steven; McCloy, Daniel. - : Zenodo, 2019
BASE
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3
Investigating the fit between phonological feature systems and brain responses to speech using EEG ...
McCloy, Daniel R.; Lee, Adrian K. C.. - : Taylor & Francis, 2019
BASE
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4
Investigating the fit between phonological feature systems and brain responses to speech using EEG ...
McCloy, Daniel R.; Lee, Adrian K. C.. - : Taylor & Francis, 2019
BASE
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5
Investigating the fit between phonological feature systems and brain responses to speech using EEG ...
McCloy, Daniel R.; Lee, Adrian K. C.. - : Taylor & Francis, 2019
BASE
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6
EEG-derived phoneme confusion matrices show the fit between phonological feature systems and brain responses to speech ...
McCloy, Daniel; Lee, Adrian. - : PsyArXiv, 2018
BASE
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7
Talker versus dialect effects on speech intelligibility: a symmetrical study
BASE
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8
Auditory attention strategy depends on target linguistic properties and spatial configurationa)
McCloy, Daniel R.; Lee, Adrian K. C.. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2015
BASE
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9
The Semantics of Implicitly Relational Predicates
BASE
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10
Prosody, intelligibility and familiarity in speech perception
BASE
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11
Separating segmental and prosodic contributions to intelligibility
BASE
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12
Corpus-based productivity measures of English -er agentives and instrumentals
McCloy, Daniel Robert. - : University of Washington, 2013
BASE
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13
Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 88 (2012) 4, 877-893
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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14
Revisiting the Population vs Phoneme-inventory Correlation
In: Moran, Steven; McCloy, Daniel; Wright, Richard (2012). Revisiting the Population vs Phoneme-inventory Correlation. In: LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts 2012. eLanguage, Portland, Oregon, 5 January 2012 - 8 January 2012. (2012)
BASE
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15
Modelling talker intelligibility variation in a dialect-controlled corpus
BASE
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16
Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size
Moran, Steven; McCloy, Daniel Robert; Wright, Richard A.. - : Linguistic Society of America, 2012
BASE
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17
Revisiting the population vs phoneme-inventory correlation
In: LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts; Vol 3: LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts 2012; 29:1-5 ; 2377-3367 (2012)
BASE
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18
Vowel laxing in Indonesian as a test case for interaction of morphological and syllabic structure
BASE
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19
The semantics of implicitly relational predicates
McCloy, Daniel Robert. - : Simon Fraser University, 2010
BASE
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20
Automated Adaptation Between Kiranti Languages
McCloy, Daniel Richard. - : University of Montana, 2006
In: Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers (2006)
Abstract: McCloy, Daniel, M.A., December 2006 Linguistics Automated Adaptation Between Kiranti Languages Chairperson: Dr. Anthony Mattina Minority language communities that are seeking to develop their language may be hampered by a lack of vernacular materials. Large volumes of such materials may be available in a related language. Automated adaptation holds potential to enable these large volumes of materials to be efficiently translated into the resource-scarce language. I describe a project to assess the feasibility of automatically adapting text between Limbu and Yamphu, two languages in Nepal’s Kiranti grouping. The approaches taken—essentially a transfer-based system partially hybridized with a Kiranti-specific interlingua—are placed in the context of machine translation efforts world-wide. A key principle embodied in this strategy is that adaptation can transcend the structural obstacles by taking advantage of functional commonalities. That is, what matters most for successful adaptation is that the languages “care about the same kinds of things.” I examine various typological phenomena of these languages to assess this degree of functional commonality. I look at the types of features marked on the finite verb, case-marking systems, the encoding of vertical deixis, object-incorporated verbs, and nominalization issues. As this Kiranti adaptation goal involves adaptation into multiple target languages, I also present a disambiguation strategy that ensures that the manual disambiguation performed for one target language is fed back into the system, such that the same disambiguation will not need to be performed again for other target languages.
Keyword: automated adaptation; disambiguation; Kiranti typology
URL: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/84
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1103&context=etd
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