1 / 17

The perception of dialect

Julia Fischer-Weppler HS Speaker Characteristics Venice International University 17.10.2007. The perception of dialect. Perception of dialect Introduction. Sources of variability are natural consequences of language variation

keola
Download Presentation

The perception of dialect

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Julia Fischer-Weppler HS Speaker Characteristics Venice International University 17.10.2007 The perception of dialect

  2. Perception of dialectIntroduction • Sources of variability are natural consequences of language variation • Different forms of variability including the impact of regional dialect have to be included in speech perception research

  3. Perception of dialectIntroduction • Dialect variation is perceived and encoded in everyday language situations • The process of speech perception includes dealing with those variations

  4. Adank and McQueen (2007)Goals of the Study • To determine how variability due to regional accents affects the processing of words spoken in isolation • To determine if short-term exposure to an unfamiliar accent affects the speed of processing words spoken in that accent

  5. Adank and McQueen (2007)Experiment • 30 participants, divided into two exposure groups: familiar accent (“Local Dutch”) and unfamiliar accent (Dutch spoken in East Flanders) • Stimuli for animacy decision tests: 120 Dutch nouns spoken by two females of each accent • Stimuli for exposure phase: 50 declarative sentences from six female speakers of each accent

  6. Adank and McQueen (2007)Experiment • Test 1: Listeners accomplished an animacy decision task for 30 words spoken from all four speakers • The exposure phase lasted about 23 minutes participants performed a distracter task • Test 2: Listeners repeated the animacy decision task

  7. Adank and McQueen (2007)Results • Performance was similar for both groups • Performance across tests was alike for both groups • Short-term exposure did not affect the speed of word processing • But: for all participants speed of word comprehension was slower for words spoken in the unfamiliar accent

  8. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Goals of the Study • To evaluate the perceptual similarity structure of regional dialect variation in the USA • To further explore how residential history affects dialect perception

  9. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Hypotheses • Naïve listeners are predicted to produce a relatively small number of groups of talkers • Geographic mobility and location are expected to affect performance • Mobile listeners are presumed to have developed more perceptual dialect categories and are therefore expected to better distinguish different dialects and to create more groups of talkers

  10. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Experiment 1 • 66 talkers from six dialect regions in the US • One (different) sentence per talker containing dialect-specific vowel shifts • 22 listeners with different residential histories • Listeners should group talkers in as many groups with as many members in each group as they wanted; no time limit was presented

  11. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Experiment 1 • On average:10 groups of talkers, with a range from 3-30 and a median of 7 and 9.36 talkers per group with a range from 1-34 and a median of 4. • Three main perceptual clusters: New England, South and Midwest/West • Relevant dimensions for perceptual similarity: linguistic markedness and geography

  12. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Experiment 2 • 48 talkers, even number of males and females from six dialect regions in the US • One novel sentence per speaker • 87 Listeners, split up in 4 groups based on residential history (non-mobile Midland, non-mobile North, mobile Midland, mobile North) • The task was the same as in Experiment 1

  13. Clopper and Pisoni (2006)Experiment 2 • On average:8.48 groups of talkers, with a range from 3-23 and a median of 8 and 7.08 talkers per group with a range from 1-38 and a median of 4. • Significantly more groups for mobile listeners • No significant difference in the ability to correctly group the talkers by dialect • Relevant dimensions for perceptual similarity: markedness, gender, geography

  14. Adank et al. (2007)Goals of the Study • Eliciting regional variation patterns in the vowel system of Standard Dutch spoken in the Netherlands and Flanders • Improving the language’s vowel system description by including regional varieties • Providing an overview of the extent of regional variation of the Dutch vowel system

  15. Adank et al. (2007)Experiment • 160 Dutch teachers (professional language users) from four different regions of each country • Target vowels were produced in carrier sentences • Measurements of duration and formant frequencies of F1 and F2 for the 4800 vowel tokens were analyzed

  16. Adank et al. (2007)Results • Enough regional information was present in the steady-state formant frequency measurements of vowels produced by professional users of the standard language to correctly classify the majority of the speakers into the appropriate speech community

  17. Discussion and Conclusion • Research on the relationship between regional, social and ethnic language variation is rapidly growing • It shows that listeners are able to make judgments about residential background and social characteristics based on the speech signal

More Related