@inproceedings{AndreevaMoebiusDemenkoetal.2017, author = {Bistra Andreeva and Bernd M{\"o}bius and Grazyna Demenko and Frank Zimmerer and Jeanin J{\"u}gler}, title = {Linguistic Measures of Pitch Range in Slavic and Germanic Languages}, series = {Proceedings of Interspeech 2015. Speech beyond speech. Towards a better understanding of the most important biosignal. Dresden, Germany. 6-10 Sep, 2015. Volume 2}, editor = {Sebastian M{\"o}ller and Hermann Ney and Bernd M{\"o}bius and Elmar N{\"o}th and Stefan Steidl}, publisher = {International Speech Communication Association}, address = {Baixas}, isbn = {978-1-5108-1790-6}, issn = {1990-9772}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:mh39-59187}, pages = {968 -- 972}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Based on specific linguistic landmarks in the speech signal, this study investigates pitch level and pitch span differences in English, German, Bulgarian and Polish. The analysis is based on 22 speakers per language (11 males and 11 females). Linear mixed models were computed that include various linguistic measures of pitch level and span, revealing characteristic differences across languages and between language groups. Pitch level appeared to have significantly higher values for the female speakers in the Slavic than the Germanic group. The male speakers showed slightly different results, with only the Polish speakers displaying significantly higher mean values for pitch level than the German males. Overall, the results show that the Slavic speakers tend to have a wider pitch span than the German speakers. But for the linguistic measure, namely for span between the initial peaks and the non-prominent valleys, we only find the difference between Polish and German speakers. We found a flatter intonation contour in German than in Polish, Bulgarian and English male and female speakers and differences in the frequency of the landmarks between languages. Concerning “speaker liveliness” we found that the speakers from the Slavic group are significantly livelier than the speakers from the Germanic group.}, language = {en} }