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1
Phonetic accommodation of human interlocutors in the context of human-computer interaction ...
Gessinger, Iona. - : Universität des Saarlandes, 2022
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Phonetic accommodation of human interlocutors in the context of human-computer interaction
Gessinger, Iona. - : Saarländische Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek, 2022
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3
Vocal accommodation in human-computer interaction : modeling and integration into spoken dialogue systems ...
Raveh, Eran. - : Universität des Saarlandes, 2021
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Vocal accommodation in human-computer interaction : modeling and integration into spoken dialogue systems
Raveh, Eran. - : Saarländische Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek, 2021
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5
Phonetic Accommodation to Hypernasal Speech
Abstract: Speech accommodation is a process in which an individual’s speech becomes more (convergence) or less (divergence) similar to their interlocutor’s speech. Individuals diverge to increase distance and reduce commonality between conversation partners (Shepard, Giles, Le Poire, 2001) based on social biases (Babel, 2010). Hypernasality is a negatively perceived (Blood Hyman, 1997; Watterson, Mancini, Brancamp, Lewis, 2013) speech disorder resulting from an excessive amount of acoustic energy emanating from the nasal cavity (Zajac Vallino, 2017). Since it is theorized that individuals diverge in negative social contexts (Shepard et al., 2001) and that hypernasality is negatively perceived (Blood Hyman, 1997; Watterson et al., 2013), we hypothesized that speakers would diverge from hypernasal speech. Speakers read sentences in response to hearing pre-recorded sentences with modelled hypernasal and typical speech. Results indicated that speakers inconsistently converged to typical levels of nasality and consistently diverged from hypernasal speech. ; M.Sc.
Keyword: 0636; Communication Accommodation; Hypernasality; Nasalance; Nasality; Phonetic Accommodation; Speech Disorders
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/98399
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6
Phonetic Attention and Predictability: How Context Shapes Exemplars and Guides Sound Change
Manker, Jonathan Taylor. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2017
In: Manker, Jonathan Taylor. (2017). Phonetic Attention and Predictability: How Context Shapes Exemplars and Guides Sound Change. UC Berkeley: Linguistics. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/10r90282 (2017)
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