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EP and BP Rhythm: Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence Sónia Frota Universidade de Lisboa Marina Vigário, Fernando Martins
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EP and BP in the rhythm typology I. Correlates of rhythm in the speech signal Frota & Vigário 2001 II. Language discrimination experiments Frota, Vigário & Martins in progress –Goals: Better understanding of the rhythmic EP / BP Clarify the status of ‘mixed’ languages
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Background Traditional view isochrony ( , ´ , ) New approach (Dasher & Bolinger, Daues 1983, 1987, Nespor 1990) –phonological & phonetic properties syllable structurexy vowel reductionxy rhythmic s intonation/stressxy –acoustic correlates reflect p-properties (Ramus et al. 1999) syllable structure variety/complexity- C %V + vowel reduction- V < V + –Rhythmic continuum or rhythm classes? perception
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P-properties: predictions EP stress-timed –reduced unstressed vowel system –phonetic deletion [ ,u ] long C clusters –strong contrast ´ / –intonation lingers on stress More stress-timed – C >BP, %V BP BP syll.timed/mixed –less vowel reduction (no centralisation [ , ]) –vowel epenthesis syllable simplication –weaker contrast ´ / –intonation // stress More syllable-timed – C EP, V<EP
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I. Correlates of rhythm Frota & Vigário 2001 Materials x
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Domain of rhythm Intonational phrase (I) –sentence = I-phrase Why? –Lapses and clashes –Weight effects (Pepperkamp 1992, Nespor 1999, G&N 1999, F&V 1999) Phrasing variation due to speech rate (slower rate > more Is within a string) Sentence duration –EP < BP (*2corpora) –Effect on C and V (Grabe & Low 2000)
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Durational difference Effect on variability –Intervalduration x100 sentence duration –standard deviation %C and %V EP/BP
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Results: EP BP Distinguishing role is played by %V and %C
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Acoustic results and our predictions %V: EP<BP %C: EP>BP %V: EP>BPX –vowel reduction 1: shorter Vs > V 2.: no V V, < %V –intrinsic V duration more extreme s in BP –phonological phrase lengthening in BP Variation in %V within EP Stress-timed EP/Syl.-timed BP
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Results: EP and BP in the rhythmic chart EP: stressed ( C) and syllable-timed (%V) mixed BP: syllable ( C) and mora-timed (%V) lang. ?
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Are mixed languages intermediate languages? If so, a rhythmic continuum (Dauer 1987, Nespor 1990, Auer 1991) If not, rhythmic classes –EP/BP results (more languages?) Correlation %V, C –One of them is enough Conflicting classifications –(At least) Both are needed
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P-properties revisited Syllable types: syllable-timed languages –p-processes: BP coda loss vowel epenthesis > Generalisation of CV –p-processes: EP effacement of Vs > C clusters Signal cues –/ C(C)V/ –p-processes
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II. Language discrimination Frota, Vigário & Martins EP and BP allow us to test the perceptual weighting of %V and C –EP %V plays the major role EP stress-timed L C plays the major role EP syllable-timed L Both are equally decisive EP stress-timed L EP syllable-timed L 2 experiments: EP/BP, Targeting 2 Languages –Test the relevance of intonation
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Methods EP/BP –source sentences: Rm 15-19 syllables each representative –low-pass filtering 400Hz –2 conditions: with F0 without F0 (flat= mean F0 ) –16 pairs: 6xY=Z;10xY Z –Y, Z: different speakers –29 subjects naive Targeting 2 Languages –Dutch, Spanish: RMN –EP, BP: Rm 15 or 17 syllables –low-pass filtering 400Hz –2 conditions Praat –20 pairs: 4xY=Z (Du/Du; Sp/Sp); 4xDu/Sp; 4xPE/Du; 4xBP/Du; 4xEP/BP –30 subjects naive
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Methods The story told – Tigre (afro-asian) & Hua (indo-pacific) –Task: Y,Z are from the same or from different Ls Training –4 sentences of Tigre (EP, Du) –4 sentences of Hua (BP, Sp) –2 Y=Z pairs, 2 Y Z pairs –both types, with feedback (5pairs; 8 pairs)
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EP/BP: results
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EP and BP are discriminated F0 is relevant –task feasable –better results EP, BP and other languages? Du, SP
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Targeting 2 Languages Is EP like Du (Tigre) or Sp (Hua) or none? Is BP like Du or Sp or none? –EP %V EP Du, EP = Sp C EP = Du, EP Sp Both problem (inconsistent results) –BP BP Du, SP?
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Targeting 2 Languages: Results
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Targeting 2 Languages Is EP like Du (Tigre) or Sp (Hua) or none? Is BP like Du or Sp or none? –EPis Hua %V EP Du, EP = Sp is not Tigre C EP = Du, EP Sp Both problem (inconsistent results) –BPis Hua BP Du, SP?
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F0 effect
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Conclusion Acoustic evidence –EP BP (%V, C) –EP has mixed rhythm stress ( C)&syll.(%V) –BP has mixed rhythm syll.( C)&mora (%V) –No problem to the rhythm class hypothesis –Test the perceptual weighting of %V and C Perceptual evidence –EP BP (62.9%) –F0 is relevant (46.7%) –EP, BP, Stress-timed L Syllable-timed L EP Du (64.3%) –%V takes the lead –EP –BP
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EP and BP Rhythm: Acoustic and Perceptual Evidence Sónia Frota Universidade de Lisboa Marina Vigário, Fernando Martins Thanks to F.Ramus, L.Wetzels, T.Rietveld, G.Elordieta
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