The primary data on pronunciation variation — e.g., dialect atlas data — is often recorded incommensurably, i.e. in different ways in different atlases, and even in different ways within the same atlas when teams of fieldworkers and transcribers are involved. In particular these data collections differ in the detail in which pronunciations are recorded, using between 40 and 100 different basic symbols. This study shows that transcription system detail (understood in this sense) increases the linguistic distance measured and therefore must be regarded as a source of bias in assessing pronunciation differences and comparing them across languages. A method is therefore introduced to reduce transcription system complexity, even while retaining ...
Dialectometry measures the differences between dialects in ways which may involve many independently...
Levenshtein distance has become a popular tool for measuring linguistic dialect distances, and has b...
It is a well-known fact that different types of features contribute to the linguistic distance betwe...
The primary data on pronunciation variation — e.g., dialect atlas data — is often recorded incommens...
The primary data on pronunciation variation – e.g., dialect atlas data – is often recorded incommens...
Structuralists famously observed that language is "un systeme oil tout se tient" (Meillet, 1903, p.4...
This article surveys recent developments furthering dialectometric research which the authors have b...
The paper investigates the effect of the quantity of phonetic detail contained in the transcribed da...
AbstractResearch in dialectal variation allows linguists to understand the fundamental principles th...
This project measures and classifies language variation. In contrast to earlier dialectology, we see...
In this paper a range of methods for measuring the phonetic distance between dialectal variants are ...
This study aimed to verify a computational phonetic and acoustic analysis tool created in the MATLAB...
Gooskens (2003) described an experiment which determined linguistic distances between 15 Norwegian d...
Abstract: The Levenshtein distance is an established metric to represent phono-logical distances bet...
Dialectometry measures the differences between dialects in ways which may involve many independently...
Levenshtein distance has become a popular tool for measuring linguistic dialect distances, and has b...
It is a well-known fact that different types of features contribute to the linguistic distance betwe...
The primary data on pronunciation variation — e.g., dialect atlas data — is often recorded incommens...
The primary data on pronunciation variation – e.g., dialect atlas data – is often recorded incommens...
Structuralists famously observed that language is "un systeme oil tout se tient" (Meillet, 1903, p.4...
This article surveys recent developments furthering dialectometric research which the authors have b...
The paper investigates the effect of the quantity of phonetic detail contained in the transcribed da...
AbstractResearch in dialectal variation allows linguists to understand the fundamental principles th...
This project measures and classifies language variation. In contrast to earlier dialectology, we see...
In this paper a range of methods for measuring the phonetic distance between dialectal variants are ...
This study aimed to verify a computational phonetic and acoustic analysis tool created in the MATLAB...
Gooskens (2003) described an experiment which determined linguistic distances between 15 Norwegian d...
Abstract: The Levenshtein distance is an established metric to represent phono-logical distances bet...
Dialectometry measures the differences between dialects in ways which may involve many independently...
Levenshtein distance has become a popular tool for measuring linguistic dialect distances, and has b...
It is a well-known fact that different types of features contribute to the linguistic distance betwe...