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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
91

Corny or Cool. Swedish Teenagers' Attitudes towards Australian and British English Accents.

Blackmore, Malin January 2010 (has links)
<p>This essay investigated Swedish teenagers' attitudes towards Australian and British English accents. The respondents were exposed to four different accents as part of a modified version of the Matched Guise Technique. They were then asked to fill out a questionnaire assessing the accents in terms of psychological qualities, social evaluation, job suitability and likability. The results show that previous research on attitudes to accents in other countries is applicable on Swedish teenagers' and that stereotyping is an influence as well.</p>
92

Focus and Tone

Hartmann, Katharina January 2007 (has links)
Tone is a distinctive feature of the lexemes in tone languages. The information-structural category focus is usually marked by syntactic and morphological means in these languages, but sometimes also by intonation strategies. In intonation languages, focus is marked by pitch movements, which are also perceived as tone. The present article discusses prosodic focus marking in these two language types.
93

Integration genom språk och museipedagogik : Integration through language and museum education

Nisimblat Heller, Antge January 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to analyze how museums, seen as heterotopic places where time and space act simultaneously, can, with the help of museum educators and guides, integrate the foreign citizens in Sweden. The analysis is done with the help of three institutions: The Vasa Museum, the Royal Armory and The Great Synagogue in Stockholm. The author of the thesis argues that recruiting trained personnel with foreign roots by museums would help significantly in the creation of a sense of collective identity and belonging among those citizens who are just adapting to the country. Through the use of Swedish, in conjunction with their mother tongue, as well as analogies, an important contribution can be attained in their integration. In this work, concepts such as the accent, are treated in a categorical manner, as the author, with the assistance of other researchers, concluded that the accent should not influence the perception of the intellectual and work capability of a professional museum educator/guide. History represents another key element in this thesis, as it discusses the way to find a new narrative form to channel history and refer to it, thus sharing historical roots with these new immigrants in Sweden.
94

Information status and prosody : production and perception in German0F*

Röhr, Christine Tanja January 2013 (has links)
In a production experiment and two follow-up perception experiments on read German we investigated the (de-)coding of discourse-new, inferentially and textually accessible and given discourse referents by prosodic means. Results reveal that a decrease in the referent’s level of givenness is reflected by an increase in its prosodic prominence (expressed by differences in the status and type of accent used) providing evidence for the relevance of different intermediate types of information status between the poles given and new. Furthermore, perception data indicate that the degree of prosodic prominence can serve as the decisive cue for decoding a referent’s level of givenness.
95

That voice sounds familiar : factors in speaker recognition

Eriksson, Erik J. January 2007 (has links)
Humans have the ability to recognize other humans by voice alone. This is important both socially and for the robustness of speech perception. This Thesis contains a set of eight studies that investigates how different factors impact on speaker recognition and how these factors can help explain how listeners perceive and evaluate speaker identity. The first study is a review paper overviewing emotion decoding and encoding research. The second study compares the relative importance of the emotional tone in the voice and the emotional content of the message. A mismatch between these was shown to impact upon decoding speed. The third study investigates the factor dialect in speaker recognition and shows, using a bidialectal speaker as the target voice to control all other variables, that the dominance of dialect cannot be overcome. The fourth paper investigates if imitated stage dialects are as perceptually dominant as natural dialects. It was found that a professional actor could disguise his voice successfully by imitating a dialect, yet that a listener's proficiency in a language or accent can reduce susceptibility to a dialect imitation. Papers five to seven focus on automatic techniques for speaker separation. Paper five shows that a method developed for Australian English diphthongs produced comparable results with a Swedish glide + vowel transition. The sixth and seventh papers investigate a speaker separation technique developed for American English. It was found that the technique could be used to separate Swedish speakers and that it is robust against professional imitations. Paper eight investigates how age and hearing impact upon earwitness reliability. This study shows that a senior citizen with corrected hearing can be as reliable an earwitness as a younger adult with no hearing problem, but suggests that a witness' general cognitive skill deterioration needs to be considered when assessing a senior citizen's earwitness evidence. On the basis of the studies a model of speaker recognition is presented, based on the face recognition model by V. Bruce and Young (1986; British Journal of Psychology, 77, pp. 305 - 327) and the voice recognition model by Belin, Fecteau and Bédard (2004; TRENDS in Cognitive Science, 8, pp. 129 - 134). The merged and modified model handles both familiar and unfamiliar voices. The findings presented in this Thesis, in particular the findings of the individual papers in Part II, have implications for criminal cases in which speaker recognition forms a part. The findings feed directly into the growing body of forensic phonetic and forensic linguistic research.
96

Acquisition du système accentuel russe et de la réduction vocalique par des apprenants francophones

Goire Fernandez, Francisco 02 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Les systèmes accentuels français et russe sont très différents. En français, l'accent tonique se place normalement sur la dernière syllabe du groupe rythmique et il n'y a pas de réduction vocalique sur les syllabes non accentuées. En russe, l'accent tonique peut en principe être placé sur n'importe quelle syllabe du mot et, en plus, certaines voyelles subissent une réduction vocalique dans les positions pré-accentuées et non accentuées. La présente recherche porte sur le processus d'acquisition du système accentuel et de la réduction vocalique du russe chez des apprenants francophones adultes. Nos sujets de recherche sont sept apprenants du russe à l'Université du Québec à Montréal. Nous avons étudié l'identification du contour accentuel des mots (la localisation des syllabes accentuées, pré-accentuées et non accentuées) par les sept apprenants, ainsi que leurs productions orales au début (après 45 heures de cours) et à la fin du niveau débutant 2 (après 90 heures de cours). Les productions orales avaient comme but de tester comment les apprenants francophones prononçaient les dix phonèmes vocaliques du russe dans les positions : accentuée, pré-accentuée et non accentuée, ayant comme donnée l'accent primaire du mot. L'évaluation des productions orales des apprenants a été faite de deux façons : à l'aide du logiciel PRAAT (évaluation expérimentale) et par trois juges locuteurs natifs du russe (évaluation perceptive). Préalablement, afin d'obtenir les paramètres expérimentaux cibles, nous avons mesuré les paramètres les plus saillants de l'accentuation (la durée des voyelles) et de la réduction vocalique (la réduction de l'espace vocalique général dans les coordonnées F1/F2) chez deux locuteurs natifs du russe. On observe une certaine dichotomie entre les résultats de l'évaluation perceptive et ceux de l'évaluation expérimentale, probablement due au fait que l'évaluation expérimentale ne prend en considération, pour l'accentuation, que les contrastes de durée des voyelles et, pour la réduction vocalique, que la réduction de l'espace vocalique général. Cependant, l'évaluation perceptive prend en compte tous les paramètres phonétiques, pour l'accentuation : la durée, l'intensité et la fréquence fondamentale et, pour la réduction vocalique: la réduction de l'espace vocalique général et la qualité même de la voyelle. Trois apprenants sur sept ont atteint la cible idéale pour l'accentuation, mais aucun ne l'a fait pour la réduction vocalique. Ceci démontre que l'acquisition du système accentuel russe par des apprenants francophones est une tâche difficile, mais pas impossible, même au niveau débutant. Par contre, l'acquisition de la réduction vocalique représente un plus grand défi. ______________________________________________________________________________ MOTS-CLÉS DE L’AUTEUR : russe, français, système accentuel, réduction vocalique, acquisition des langues secondes.
97

Voice recognition system based on intra-modal fusion and accent classification

Mangayyagari, Srikanth 01 June 2007 (has links)
Speaker or voice recognition is the task of automatically recognizing people from their speech signals. This technique makes it possible to use uttered speech to verify the speaker's identity and control access to secured services. Surveillance, counter-terrorism and homeland security department can collect voice data from telephone conversation without having to access to any other biometric dataset. In this type of scenario it would be beneficial if the confidence level of authentication is high. Other applicable areas include online transactions,database access services, information services, security control for confidential information areas, and remote access to computers. Speaker recognition systems, even though they have been around for four decades, have not been widely considered as standalone systems for biometric security because of their unacceptably low performance, i.e., high false acceptance and true rejection. This thesis focuses on the enhancement of speaker recognition through a combination of intra-modal fusion and accent modeling. Initial enhancement of speaker recognition was achieved through intra-modal hybrid fusion (HF) of likelihood scores generated by Arithmetic Harmonic Sphericity (AHS) and Hidden Markov Model (HMM) techniques. Due to the Contrastive nature of AHS and HMM, we have observed a significant performance improvement of 22% , 6% and 23% true acceptance rate (TAR) at 5% false acceptance rate (FAR), when this fusion technique was evaluated on three different datasets -- YOHO, USF multi-modal biometric and Speech Accent Archive (SAA), respectively. Performance enhancement has been achieved on both the datasets; however performance on YOHO was comparatively higher than that on USF dataset, owing to the fact that USF dataset is a noisy outdoor dataset whereas YOHO is an indoor dataset. In order to further increase the speaker recognition rate at lower FARs, we combined accent information from an accent classification (AC) system with our earlier HF system. Also, in homeland security applications, speaker accent will play a critical role in the evaluation of biometric systems since users will be international in nature. So incorporating accent information into the speaker recognition/verification system is a key component that our study focused on. The proposed system achieved further performance improvements of 17% and 15% TAR at an FAR of 3% when evaluated on SAA and USF multi-modal biometric datasets. The accent incorporation method and the hybrid fusion techniques discussed in this work can also be applied to any other speaker recognition systems.
98

The priority of temporal aspects in L2-Swedish prosody : Studies in perception and production

Thorén, Bosse January 2008 (has links)
Foreign accent can be everything from hardly detectable to rendering the second language speech unintelligible. It is assumed that certain aspects of a specific target language contribute more to making the foreign accented speech intelligible and listener friendly, than others. The present thesis examines a teaching strategy for Swedish pronunciation in second language education. The teaching strategy “Basic prosody” or BP, gives priority to temporal aspects of Swedish prosody, which means the temporal phonological contrasts word stress and quantity, as well as the durational realizations of these contrasts. BP does not prescribe any specific tonal realizations. This standpoint is based on the great regional variety in realization and distribution of Swedish word accents. The teaching strategy consists virtually of three directives: · Stress the proper word in the sentence. · Stress proper syllables in stressed words and make them longer. · Lengthen the proper segment – vowel or subsequent consonant – in the stressed syllable. These directives reflect the view that all phonological length is stress-induced, and that vowel length and consonant length are equally important as learning goals. BP is examined in the light of existing findings in the field of second language pronunciation and with respect to the phonetic correlates of Swedish stress and quantity. Five studies examine the relation between segment durations and the categorization made by native Swedish listeners. The results indicate that the postvocalic consonant duration contributes to quantity categorization as well as giving the proper duration to stressed syllables. Furthermore, native Swedish speakers are shown to apply the complementary /V: C/ - /VC:/ pattern also when speaking English and German, by lengthening postvocalic consonants. The correctness of the priority is not directly addressed but important aspects of BP are supported by earlier findings as well as the results from the present studies. / <p>För att köpa boken skicka en beställning till exp@ling.su.se/ To order the book send an e-mail to exp@ling.su.se</p>
99

The priority of temporal aspects in L2-Swedish prosody : Studies in perception and production

Thorén, Bosse January 2008 (has links)
Foreign accent can be everything from hardly detectable to rendering the second language speech unintelligible. It is assumed that certain aspects of a specific target language contribute more to making the foreign accented speech intelligible and listener friendly, than others. The present thesis examines a teaching strategy for Swedish pronunciation in second language education. The teaching strategy “Basic prosody” or BP, gives priority to temporal aspects of Swedish prosody, which means the temporal phonological contrasts word stress and quantity, as well as the durational realizations of these contrasts. BP does not prescribe any specific tonal realizations. This standpoint is based on the great regional variety in realization and distribution of Swedish word accents. The teaching strategy consists virtually of three directives: · Stress the proper word in the sentence. · Stress proper syllables in stressed words and make them longer. · Lengthen the proper segment – vowel or subsequent consonant – in the stressed syllable. These directives reflect the view that all phonological length is stress-induced, and that vowel length and consonant length are equally important as learning goals. BP is examined in the light of existing findings in the field of second language pronunciation and with respect to the phonetic correlates of Swedish stress and quantity. Five studies examine the relation between segment durations and the categorization made by native Swedish listeners. The results indicate that the postvocalic consonant duration contributes to quantity categorization as well as giving the proper duration to stressed syllables. Furthermore, native Swedish speakers are shown to apply the complementary /V: C/ - /VC:/ pattern also when speaking English and German, by lengthening postvocalic consonants. The correctness of the priority is not directly addressed but important aspects of BP are supported by earlier findings as well as the results from the present studies. / <p>För att köpa boken skicka en beställning till exp@ling.su.se/ To order the book send an e-mail to exp@ling.su.se</p>
100

Word, Phrase, and Clitic Prosody in Bosnian, Serbian, and Croatian

Werle, Adam 01 February 2009 (has links)
I investigate the phonology of prosodic clitics--independent syntactic words not parsed as independent prosodic words--in Bosnian, Serbian, and Croatian. I ask, first, how clitics are organized into prosodic structures, and second, how this is determined by the grammar. Following Zec (1997, 2005), I look at several clitic categories, including negation, prepositions, complementizers, conjunctions, and second-position clitics. Based on a reanalysis of word accent (Browne and McCawley 1965, Inkelas and Zec 1988, Zec 1999), I argue that in some cases where a preposition, complementizer, or conjunction fails to realize accent determined by a following word, it is not a proclitic-- that is, prosodified with the following word--but rather a free clitic parsed directly by a phonological phrase. Conversely, the second-position clitics are not always enclitic--that is, prosodified with a preceding word--but are sometimes free. Their second-position word order results not from enclisis, but from the avoidance of free clitics at phrase edges, where they would interfere with the alignment of phonological phrases to prosodic words. Regarding the determination of clisis by the grammar, I argue for an interface constraint approach (Selkirk 1995, Truckenbrodt 1995), whereby prosodic structures are built according to general constraints on their well-formedness, and on their interface to syntactic structures. I contrast this with the subcategorization approach , which sees clisis as specified for each clitic (Klavans 1982, Radanovic-Kocic 1988, Zec and Inkelas 1990). The comparison across clitic categories provides key support for the interface constraint approach, showing that their prosody depends on their syntactic configurations and phonological shapes, rather than on arbitrary subcategorizations. Prosodic differences across categories are a derivative effect of their configuration in the clause, and of the division of the clause into phonological phrases. The relevance of phonological phrases consists in how their edges discourage some kinds of clisis, blocking, for example, proclisis of complementizers and conjunctions to their complements. Free clisis is disfavored at phrase edges, producing the second-position effect. Thus, the interface constraint approach leads to a unified account of word, phrase, and clitic prosody.

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