This study presents a comparison of the acoustic properties of Australian English monophthongs produced by 60 monolingual females from Sydney’s Northern Beaches reported in Cox’s [1] corpus and by the four monolingual females from Sydney recorded within the AusTalk corpus [2]. Cross-corpus discriminant analyses are used to investigate the acoustic similarity between the two corpora to determine whether the values from these corpora would be appropriate for predicting L2 difficulty in future cross-linguistic studies using Western Sydney speakers. Preliminary findings suggest that there is little overall acoustic similarity across these two vowel corpora as classification scores from the discriminant analyses were consistently higher for the ...
This paper presents results of a vowel categorisation task of front lax vowels in /hVt/, /hVl/ and /...
This paper examines the assumption that Australian English vowel variation within urban centres is r...
For nearly 50 years, Australian English has been described as a dialect exhibiting broadness variati...
AbstractThe short front vowels KIT /ɪ/, TRAP /æ/, and DRESS /ɛ/differ in their realization between s...
Little is known about factors that influence dialect perception and the cues listeners rely on in t...
The study presents an acoustic examination of the 18 stressed monophthongs and diphthongs of Standar...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
Various assertions have been made from time to time in the literature about possible regional differ...
We present preliminary results of an acoustic analysis of monophthongal vowels produced by five fema...
This study provides a thorough acoustic analysis of the 18 Australian English monophthongs and dipht...
This study presents an acoustic analysis looking at phonetic diversity in Auckland. New Zealand Engl...
This paper takes stock of findings based on the Monash Corpus of Australian English. In 1996– 97 mem...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 74-82.1. Introduction -- 2. Australian English vowels -- 3. Art...
Second language (L2) speech learning is greatly affected by the differences in the phonological syst...
This paper presents results of a vowel categorisation task of front lax vowels in /hVt/, /hVl/ and /...
This paper examines the assumption that Australian English vowel variation within urban centres is r...
For nearly 50 years, Australian English has been described as a dialect exhibiting broadness variati...
AbstractThe short front vowels KIT /ɪ/, TRAP /æ/, and DRESS /ɛ/differ in their realization between s...
Little is known about factors that influence dialect perception and the cues listeners rely on in t...
The study presents an acoustic examination of the 18 stressed monophthongs and diphthongs of Standar...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
In studies of dialect variation, the articulatory nature of vowels is sometimes inferred from forman...
Various assertions have been made from time to time in the literature about possible regional differ...
We present preliminary results of an acoustic analysis of monophthongal vowels produced by five fema...
This study provides a thorough acoustic analysis of the 18 Australian English monophthongs and dipht...
This study presents an acoustic analysis looking at phonetic diversity in Auckland. New Zealand Engl...
This paper takes stock of findings based on the Monash Corpus of Australian English. In 1996– 97 mem...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 74-82.1. Introduction -- 2. Australian English vowels -- 3. Art...
Second language (L2) speech learning is greatly affected by the differences in the phonological syst...
This paper presents results of a vowel categorisation task of front lax vowels in /hVt/, /hVl/ and /...
This paper examines the assumption that Australian English vowel variation within urban centres is r...
For nearly 50 years, Australian English has been described as a dialect exhibiting broadness variati...