Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (20)
- Article (7)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Other (1)
- Working Paper (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (30)
Keywords
- Korpus <Linguistik> (10)
- Forschungsdaten (8)
- Artikulation (5)
- prosody (5)
- Metadatenmodell (4)
- syllable prominence (4)
- Metadaten (3)
- Prosodie (3)
- Sprachproduktion (3)
- acoustic correlates (3)
Publicationstate
- Veröffentlichungsversion (19)
- Ahead of Print (1)
- Postprint (1)
- Zweitveröffentlichung (1)
Reviewstate
Publisher
- International Speech Communications Association (5)
- CLARIN (2)
- Elsevier (2)
- Linköping University Electronic Press (2)
- Sage Publications (2)
- University of Glasgow (2)
- Zenodo (2)
- City University of Hong Kong (1)
- European Language Resources Association (1)
- Institut für Phonetik und Sprachverarbeitung, Universität München (1)
This report presents a corpus of articulations recorded with Schlieren photography, a recording technique to visualize aeroflow dynamics for two purposes. First, as a means to investigate aerodynamic processes during speech production without any obstruction of the lips and the nose. Second, to provide material for lecturers of phonetics to illustrates these aerodynamic processes. Speech production was recorded with 10 kHz frame rate for statistical video analyses. Downsampled videos (500 Hz) were uplodad to a youtube channel for illustrative purposes. Preliminary analyses demonstrate potential in applying Schlieren photography in research.
This paper addresses long-term archival for large corpora. Three aspects specific to language resources are focused, namely (1) the removal of resources for legal reasons, (2) versioning of (unchanged) objects in constantly growing resources, especially where objects can be part of multiple releases but also part of different collections, and (3) the conversion of data to new formats for digital preservation. It is motivated why language resources may have to be changed, and why formats may need to be converted. As a solution, the use of an intermediate proxy object called a signpost is suggested. The approach will be exemplified with respect to the corpora of the Leibniz Institute for the German Language in Mannheim, namely the German Reference Corpus (DeReKo) and the Archive for Spoken German (AGD).
Repeating the movements associated with activities such as drawing or sports typically leads to improvements in kinematic behavior: these movements become faster, smoother, and exhibit less variation. Likewise, practice has also been shown to lead to faster and smoother movement trajectories in speech articulation. However, little is known about its effect on articulatory variability. To address this, we investigate the extent to which repetition and predictability influence the articulation of the frequent German word “sie” [zi] (they). We find that articulatory variability is proportional to speaking rate and the duration of [zi], and that overall variability decreases as [zi] is repeated during the experiment. Lower variability is also observed as the conditional probability of [zi] increases, and the greatest reduction in variability occurs during the execution of the vocalic target of [i]. These results indicate that practice can produce observable differences in the articulation of even the most common gestures used in speech.
Repeating the movements associated with activities such as drawing or sports typically leads to improvements in kinematic behavior: these movements become faster, smoother, and exhibit less variation. Likewise, practice has also been shown to lead to faster and smoother movement trajectories in speech articulation. However, little is known about its effect on articulatory variability. To address this, we investigate the extent to which repetition and predictability influence the articulation of the frequent German word “sie” [zi] (they). We find that articulatory variability is proportional to speaking rate and the duration of [zi], and that overall variability decreases as [zi] is repeated during the experiment. Lower variability is also observed as the conditional probability of [zi] increases, and the greatest reduction in variability occurs during the execution of the vocalic target of [i]. These results indicate that practice can produce observable differences in the articulation of even the most common gestures used in speech.
This paper describes work directed towards the development of a syllable prominence-based prosody generation functionality for a German unit selection speech synthesis system. A general concept for syllable prominence-based prosody generation in unit selection synthesis is proposed. As a first step towards its implementation, an automated syllable prominence annotation procedure based on acoustic analyses has been performed on the BOSS speech corpus. The prominence labeling has been evaluated against an existing annotation of lexical stress levels and manual prominence labeling on a subset of the corpus. We discuss methods and results and give an outlook on further implementation steps.
CMDI Explorer
(2021)
We present CMDI Explorer, a tool that empowers users to easily explore the contents of complex CMDI records and to process selected parts of them with little effort. The tool allows users, for instance, to analyse virtual collections represented by CMDI records, and to send collection items to other CLARIN services such as the Switchboard for subsequent processing. CMDI Explorer hence adds functionality that many users felt was lacking from the CLARIN tool space.
Prominence has been widely studied on the word level and the syllable level. An extensive study comparing the two approaches is missing in the literature. This study investigates how word and syllable prominence relate to each other in German. We find that perceptual ratings based on the word level are more extreme than those based on the syllable level. The correlations between word prominence and acoustic features are greater than the correlations between syllable prominence and acoustic features.
Die vorliegende Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit verschieden Methoden zur Erhebung von perzeptuellen Prominenzurteilen von naiven Hörern im Deutschen. Es werden zwei Experimente vorgestellt, die sich zum einen mit der Verwendung von verschiedenen Skalen, zum anderen mit der Verwendung von unterschiedlichen Bewertungsebenen zur Beurteilung von perzeptueller Prominenz beschäftigen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Ergebnisse von Studien, welche auf unterschiedlichen Erhebungstechniken beruhen nicht ohne weiteres vergleichbar sind. Die Arbeit untersucht außerdem die Effekte einer Normalisierung der Prominenzurteile. Die Dissertation schließt mit einem Ausblick für zukünftige Studien. Hierbei werden hauptsächlich die vielfältigen Interaktionen von verschiedenen Quellen und dem Kontext bei der Beurteilung der perzeptuellen Prominenz adressiert.
This paper presents newly developed guidelines for prosodic annotation of German as a consensus system agreed upon by German intonologists. The DIMA system is rooted in the framework of autosegmental-metrical phonology. One important goal of the consensus is to make exchanging data between groups easier since German intonation is currently annotated according to different models. To this end, we aim to provide guidelines that are easy to learn. The guidelines were evaluated running an inter-annotator reliability study on three different speech styles (read speech, monologue and dialogue). The overall high κ between 0.76 and 0.89 (depending on the speech style) shows that the DIMA conventions can be applied successfully.