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1
Managing data for integrated speech corpus analysis in SPeech Across Dialects of English (SPADE)
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2
Large-scale analyses of English /s/-retraction across dialects ...
Stuart-Smith, Jane; Sonderegger, Morgan; MacDonald, Rachel. - : Open Science Framework, 2019
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3
ISCAN: a System for Integrated Phonetic Analyses Across Speech Corpora
McAuliffe, Michael; Coles, Arlie; Goodale, Michael. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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4
Large-scale Acoustic Analysis of Dialectal and Social Factors in English /s/-retraction
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5
Age Vectors vs. Axes of Intraspeaker Variation in Vowel Formants Measured Automatically From Several English Speech Corpora
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6
Attention and salience in lexically-guided perceptual learning ...
McAuliffe, Michael. - : University of British Columbia, 2015
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7
Attention and salience in lexically-guided perceptual learning
McAuliffe, Michael. - : University of British Columbia, 2015
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8
Can mergers-in-progress be unmerged in speech accommodation?
Babel, Molly; McAuliffe, Michael; Haber, Graham. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2013
Abstract: This study examines spontaneous phonetic accommodation of a dialect with distinct categories by speakers who are in the process of merging those categories. We focus on the merger of the NEAR and SQUARE lexical sets in New Zealand English, presenting New Zealand participants with an unmerged speaker of Australian English. Mergers-in-progress are a uniquely interesting sound change as they showcase the asymmetry between speech perception and production. Yet, we examine mergers using spontaneous phonetic imitation, which is phenomenon that is necessarily a behavior where perceptual input influences speech production. Phonetic imitation is quantified by a perceptual measure and an acoustic calculation of mergedness using a Pillai-Bartlett trace. The results from both analyses indicate spontaneous phonetic imitation is moderated by extra-linguistic factors such as the valence of assigned conditions and social bias. We also find evidence for a decrease in the degree of mergedness in post-exposure productions. Taken together, our results suggest that under the appropriate conditions New Zealanders phonetically accommodate to Australian English and that in the process of speech imitation, mergers-in-progress can, but do not consistently, become less merged.
Keyword: Psychology
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3781342
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069011
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00653
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