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1
Detection of imitated voices : who are reliable earwitnesses?
In: The international journal of speech, language and the law. - London : Equinox Publishing 17 (2010) 1, 25-44
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2
An investigation of the effectiveness of a Swedish glide + vowel segment for speaker discrimination
In: The international journal of speech, language and the law. - London : Equinox Publishing 15 (2008) 1, 51-66
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3
Development of fluency and revision in L1 and L2 writing in Swedish high school years eight and nine
In: ITL. - Amsterdam : Benjamins (2008) 156, 133-151
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4
A bidialectal experiment on voice identification
In: Institutionen för Lingvistik <Lund>. Working papers. - Lund : Univ. (2008) 53, 145-158
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5
Computer keystroke logging and writing : methods and applications
Holmqvist, Kenneth; Lindgren, Eva (Hrsg.); Karlsson, Henrik. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2006
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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6
A switch of dialect as disguise
In: Institutionen för Lingvistik <Lund>. Working papers. - Lund : Univ. (2006) 52, 113-116
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7
A tast of Kiwi : does the Swedish palate differ in sensitivity and preference from the New Zealanders'?
In: Te reo. - Auckland 48 (2005), 29-40
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8
Imitation und Reduktion : eine Fallstudie zu den Fähigkeiten eines professionellen Imitators
In: Norden und Süden. - Umeå : Umeå Univ. (2004), 51-58
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9
Papers from the Sixth International Conference of the Association for Language Awareness, Umeå, July 2002
Malmqvist, Anita (Hrsg.); Valfridsson, Ingela (Hrsg.); Lindberg, Inger (Mitarb.)...
In: Language awareness. - Abingdon : Routledge 12 (2003) 3-4, 155-255
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10
Perception of Swedish vowel quantity by native and British English listeners
In: La fonologia dell'interlingua. - Milano : Angeli (2003), 41-55
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11
The LS graph : a methodology for visualizing writing revision
In: Language learning. - Hoboken, NJ : Wiley 52 (2002) 3, 565-595
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12
Discriminating between speakers - is this a skill language learners acquire?
In: Views on the acquisition and use of a second language. - Barcelona : Univ. Pompeu Fabra (1997), 457-467
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13
L2 writing : a pilot investigation using key-stroke logging
In: Views on the acquisition and use of a second language. - Barcelona : Univ. Pompeu Fabra (1997), 553-565
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14
Dialect imitations in speaker recognition
Abstract: Comunicació presentada al Second European IAFL Conference on Forensic Liguistics celebrat del 14 al 16 de setembre de 2006 a Barcelona. ; Voice imitation and disguise are possible threats to the performance of a speaker recognition system and to the accuracy of earwitness descriptions. One common disguise is the modification of the own dialect or accent. In this paper, this kind of disguising is explored, using recordings from a well-known actor with considerable experience of dialect and accent imitation. In order to see how successful his dialect imitations are and how the process of speaker discrimination is influenced by accent disguise, two sets human perception tests were constructed. One set focused on American and British English dialects, and one set on American and London English accents and Spanish-accented English. Each set consisted of three parts: a same-different speaker test, a same-different accent test, and a select the accent from a closed-set of options test. The results show that Johnny Depp is successful without his visual props and demonstrate a high correlation between the quality of the accent imitations and the failure of the human listeners to recognize that the voices come from the same speaker. The third parts of the experimental sets suggest the importance of familiarity with the accent that feeds into parts one and two. Spanish listeners, for example, are less accepting of the Spanish-accented English than non- Spanish speakers. Finally, the same speech segments used in the perception test were used in an automatic speaker recognition experiment in order to compare the results and to check the robustness of the system in front of the voice changes. The results showed, once again, a low correlation between human and automatic speaker recognition.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10230/46031
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