The study reports the results of an acoustic analysis of vowel reduction of the /iː/ vowel, considering all three traditionally explored aspects of vowel reduction, i.e. duration, F1 and F2 in read speech produced by 12 native speakers of English. Starting from the observation that the standard literature considers only duration as a proxy for overall reduction, the aim of the study is to verify whether duration, F1 and F2 exhibit reduction (construed as shortening of duration and centralization of formants, respectively) to the same degree. The r test reveals the lack of a robust linear correlation between duration, F1 and F2, the highest value being 0.51 (the correlation between duration and F1) and 0.24 (the correlation between du...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2005.This dissertation reports the results of a study of ...
The resonant frequencies of the vocal tract during vowel production convey information about the lin...
A striking feature of spoken English is vowel reduction ; unstressed syllables have a strong tendenc...
The study reports the results of an acoustic analysis of vowel reduction of the /iː/ vowel, consider...
The study reports the results of an acoustic analysis of vowel reduction of the /iː/ vowel, consid- ...
Novel measures for vowel reduction are presented here, for examining vowel space as a whole, and for...
Word frequency, phonological neighborhood density, semantic predictability in context, and discourse...
F1 correlates with vowel height: the higher the vowel, the lower the F1. A number of studies hav
Speaking is generally considered efficient in that less effort is spent articulating more redundant ...
International audienceThe present research addresses the question whether an automated analysis of l...
Modelling varying speaking style remains a challenge to sta te of the art speech recognition and syn...
In natural speech there are differences in the realisation of vowels. Numerous factors such as speak...
This study investigates vowel reduction in unstressed syllables in German Learner English, comparing...
Much has been written on the reduction of vowels in unstressed syllables focusing mainly on Indo-Eur...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2005.This dissertation reports the results of a study of ...
The resonant frequencies of the vocal tract during vowel production convey information about the lin...
A striking feature of spoken English is vowel reduction ; unstressed syllables have a strong tendenc...
The study reports the results of an acoustic analysis of vowel reduction of the /iː/ vowel, consider...
The study reports the results of an acoustic analysis of vowel reduction of the /iː/ vowel, consid- ...
Novel measures for vowel reduction are presented here, for examining vowel space as a whole, and for...
Word frequency, phonological neighborhood density, semantic predictability in context, and discourse...
F1 correlates with vowel height: the higher the vowel, the lower the F1. A number of studies hav
Speaking is generally considered efficient in that less effort is spent articulating more redundant ...
International audienceThe present research addresses the question whether an automated analysis of l...
Modelling varying speaking style remains a challenge to sta te of the art speech recognition and syn...
In natural speech there are differences in the realisation of vowels. Numerous factors such as speak...
This study investigates vowel reduction in unstressed syllables in German Learner English, comparing...
Much has been written on the reduction of vowels in unstressed syllables focusing mainly on Indo-Eur...
rate of a sentence context affects the identification of synthetic vowels, even if the vowel contras...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2005.This dissertation reports the results of a study of ...
The resonant frequencies of the vocal tract during vowel production convey information about the lin...
A striking feature of spoken English is vowel reduction ; unstressed syllables have a strong tendenc...