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1
Does the Speech Cue Profile Affect Response to Amplitude Envelope Distortion?
In: J Speech Lang Hear Res (2021)
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2
The Advantage of Knowing the Talker
Souza, Pamela [Sonstige]; Gehani, Namita [Sonstige]; Wright, Richard [Sonstige]. - 2020
DNB Subject Category Language
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3
Cross-Linguistic Acoustic Characteristics of Phonation: A Machine Learning Approach
Panfili, Laura. - 2018
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4
Modeling the Perceptual Learning of Novel Dialect Features
Tatman, Rachael. - 2017
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5
Um and Uh, and the Expression of Stance in Conversational Speech
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6
The Role of Morphology in Word Recognition of Hebrew as a Templatic Language
Oganyan, Marina. - 2017
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7
The Role of Acoustic Detail in the Production and Processing of Vowels in Spontaneous Speech
Sims, Michelle Nicole. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2016
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8
The Role of Acoustic Detail in the Production and Processing of Vowels in Spontaneous Speech
Sims, Michelle Nicole. - : University of Alberta. Department of Linguistics., 2016
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9
An Examination of Sources of Variability Across the Consonant-Nucleus-Consonant Test in Cochlear Implant Listeners
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10
Talker versus dialect effects on speech intelligibility: a symmetrical study
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11
The Phonetics of Stance-taking
Abstract: Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015 ; Stance -- attitudes and opinions about the topic of discussion -- has been investigated textually in conversation- and discourse analysis and in computational models, but little work has focused on its acoustic-phonetic properties. It is a challenging problem, given the complexity of stance and the many other types of meaning that must share the same acoustic channels, all of which are overlaid on the lexical and syntactic material of the message. With the goal of identifying automatically-extractable, acoustically-measurable correlates of stance-taking, this dissertation presents a new audio corpus of stance-dense interaction and three phonetic experiments which find signals of stance in prosodic measures of pitch, intensity, and duration. The ATAROS corpus contains pairs of speakers engaged in collaborative conversational tasks designed to elicit frequent changes in stance at varying levels of involvement. Interactions are transcribed, time-aligned to the audio, and manually annotated for stance strength (none, weak, moderate, strong), polarity (positive, negative, neutral), and stance type (e.g., opinion-offering and soliciting, (dis)agreement, persuasion, rapport-building, etc.). In the first experiment, combinations of pitch and intensity contours are shown to differentiate four discourse functions within a small sample of instances of the word `yeah' that contribute to negative stances. In the second experiment, vowel duration and intensity separate six common stance-act types in over 2200 `yeahs,' changes in pitch and intensity correlate with stance strength, and all three measures are involved in signaling positive stance. The third and largest experiment examines over 32,000 stressed vowels in content words spoken by 40 speakers and finds that pitch and intensity increase with stance strength, longer vowel duration is the primary signal of positive polarity, and a combination of these measures helps distinguish several notable stance-act types, including: agreement in general, weak-positive agreement, rapport-building agreement, reluctance to accept a stance, stance-softening, and backchannels. These results, and the corpus itself, contribute to the study and understanding of the acoustic-phonetic properties of the social and attitudinal messages conveyed in natural speech, information which may be of use to future work in theoretical, experimental, and computational linguistics.
Keyword: acoustic phonetics; audio corpus; collaborative conversation; Linguistics; prosody; stance
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1773/34001
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12
The prosody of negative ‘yeah’
In: LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts; Vol 6: LSA Annual Meeting Extended Abstracts 2015; 6:1-5 ; 2377-3367 (2015)
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13
Prosody, intelligibility and familiarity in speech perception
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14
Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 88 (2012) 4, 877-893
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OLC Linguistik
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15
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)
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16
Modelling talker intelligibility variation in a dialect-controlled corpus
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17
Revisiting population size vs. phoneme inventory size
Moran, Steven; McCloy, Daniel Robert; Wright, Richard A.. - : Linguistic Society of America, 2012
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18
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)
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19
Afro-American short stories
Puschmann-Nalenz, Barbara [Herausgeber]; Wright, Richard [Mitwirkender]. - Stuttgart : Reclam, 2011
DNB Subject Category Language
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20
The Cambridge encyclopedia of the language sciences
Croft, William; Coulmas, Florian; Allen, Mark D.. - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2011
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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