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21
The FACE of Change in English Dialects: 1950 v 2018
In: Leemann, Adrian; Blaxter, Tam; Britain, David; Earnshaw, Kate (2019). The FACE of Change in English Dialects: 1950 v 2018. In: 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Melbourne, Australia, 5 August 2019 - 9 August 2019, 373-377. (2019)
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22
Between-speaker variation in English Learners' Realisation of Dental Fricatives
In: Graeppi, Christine; Leemann, Adrian (2019). Between-speaker variation in English Learners' Realisation of Dental Fricatives. In: 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Melbourne, Australia, 5 August 2019 - 9 August 2019, 974-978. (2019)
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23
Areale Variation von /r/-Realisierungen in schweizerdeutschen Dialekten.: Eine quantitative Untersuchung von Crowdsourcing-Daten
In: Linguistik Online; Bd. 98 Nr. 5 (2019): Alemannische Dialektologie – Forschungsstand und Perspektiven. Sonderheft; 11-30 ; Linguistik Online; Vol. 98 No. 5 (2019): Alemannische Dialektologie – Forschungsstand und Perspektiven. Sonderheft; 11-30 ; 1615-3014 (2019)
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24
Regional variation of /r/ in Swiss German dialects ...
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25
The English Dialects App: The creation of a crowdsourced dialect corpus ...
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26
The role of segments and prosody in the identification of a speaker’s dialect
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27
l/-vocalisation in Lucerne Swiss German dialects:a sociophonetic analysis using big data
Zihlmann, Urban; Leemann, Adrian. - : Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, 2018
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28
The English Dialects App:the creation of a crowdsourced dialect corpus
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29
Visual input trumps auditory input:teaching English intonation
Leemann, Adrian; Portmann, Lara. - : Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, 2018
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30
Using impact to make impact?:experiences from a dialect crowdsourcing project
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31
Regional variation of /r/ in dialects of Swiss German
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32
/l/-vocalisation in Lucerne Swiss German dialects: a sociophonetic analysis using big data ...
Zihlmann, Urban B; Leemann, Adrian. - : Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft und Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 2017
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33
Listeners use temporal information to identify French- and English-accented speech
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34
Analyzing geospatial variation in articulation rate using crowdsourced speech data
Leemann, Adrian. - 2017
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35
Editorial in Multiplicity of Cues and Functions in Prosody
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36
The diffusion of /l/-vocalization in Swiss German
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37
/l/-vocalisation in Lucerne Swiss German dialects: a sociophonetic analysis using big data
In: Zihlmann, Urban B; Leemann, Adrian (2017). /l/-vocalisation in Lucerne Swiss German dialects: a sociophonetic analysis using big data. In: Phonetics & Phonology in German-speaking countries (P&P 13), Berlin, 27 September 2017 - 29 September 2017. Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft und Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 201-204. (2017)
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38
Listeners use temporal information to identify French- and English-accented speech
In: ISSN: 0167-6393 ; EISSN: 1872-7182 ; Speech Communication ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02271364 ; Speech Communication, Elsevier : North-Holland, 2016, 86, pp.121-134. ⟨10.1016/j.specom.2016.11.006⟩ (2016)
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39
Towards a typology of prominence perception:the role of duration
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40
Identifying a speaker's regional origin:the role of temporal information
Abstract: Previous studies have revealed that, depending on the language, listeners can identify speakers’ dialects quite well. The role of segments and prosody in this task is largely unknown, however. In a between-subjects design, we tested a total of 30 listeners in two conditions: in the unmorphed condition, listeners heard original sentences from two Swiss German dialects; in the duration morphed condition, listeners heard the same material, but with syllable durations exchanged between the two dialects. In a two-alternative forced choice design, subjects judged the regional origin of the stimuli heard. Results revealed near perfect identification performance for both conditions, thus underlining the overriding dominance of segmental cues in dialect identification tasks. The findings reported are pertinent to forensic phonetics, enhancing the diagnostic power of naïve and expert listeners’ claims about suspect speakers’ voices.
URL: https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/125818/
https://doi.org/10.21437/SpeechProsody.2016-222
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