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 dia...
Three experiments are described investigating the role of different linguistic levels in the identif...
Twenty American English listeners identified gated fragments of all 2288 possible English within-wor...
Conference PaperSecond-order statistical methods show very good results for automatic speaker identi...
The objective of this study is to investigate the role of segments, rhythm, and rhythm combined with...
The objective of this study is to investigate the role of segments, rhythm, and rhythm combined with...
Which acoustic cues can be used by listeners to identify speakers’ linguistic origins in foreign-acc...
How do rhythmic and temporal features of non-native speech allow us to take guesses about a speaker’...
We present results from an experiment which shows that voice perception is influenced by the phoneti...
International audienceIdentifying a language or an accent relies on bothsegmental and suprasegmental...
Criminals may purposely try to hide their identity by using a voice disguise such as imitating anoth...
Listeners are typically able to identify speech as either being produced spontaneously or read from ...
This study investigates how French listeners exploi t phonological and phonetic cues in segmenting c...
Previous studies have shown that listeners perform worse in speaker identification experiments when ...
Traditionally, work in automatic accent recognition has followed a similar research trajectory to th...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
Three experiments are described investigating the role of different linguistic levels in the identif...
Twenty American English listeners identified gated fragments of all 2288 possible English within-wor...
Conference PaperSecond-order statistical methods show very good results for automatic speaker identi...
The objective of this study is to investigate the role of segments, rhythm, and rhythm combined with...
The objective of this study is to investigate the role of segments, rhythm, and rhythm combined with...
Which acoustic cues can be used by listeners to identify speakers’ linguistic origins in foreign-acc...
How do rhythmic and temporal features of non-native speech allow us to take guesses about a speaker’...
We present results from an experiment which shows that voice perception is influenced by the phoneti...
International audienceIdentifying a language or an accent relies on bothsegmental and suprasegmental...
Criminals may purposely try to hide their identity by using a voice disguise such as imitating anoth...
Listeners are typically able to identify speech as either being produced spontaneously or read from ...
This study investigates how French listeners exploi t phonological and phonetic cues in segmenting c...
Previous studies have shown that listeners perform worse in speaker identification experiments when ...
Traditionally, work in automatic accent recognition has followed a similar research trajectory to th...
Information in speech does not unfold discretely over time; perceptual cues are gradient and overlap...
Three experiments are described investigating the role of different linguistic levels in the identif...
Twenty American English listeners identified gated fragments of all 2288 possible English within-wor...
Conference PaperSecond-order statistical methods show very good results for automatic speaker identi...