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pro vyhledávání: '"Jaclyn Wiener"'
Autor:
Melanie Ward, Nicholas Mason, Sherilyn Wilman, Keagan Francis, Adelya Urmanche, Jennifer S. Pardo, Jaclyn Wiener
Publikováno v:
Journal of Phonetics. 69:1-11
Phonetic convergence is a form of variation in speech production in which a talker adopts aspects of another talker’s acoustic–phonetic repertoire. To date, this phenomenon has been investigated in non-interactive laboratory tasks extensively and
Autor:
Nicholas Mason, Keagan Francis, Hannah Gash, Sherilyn Wilman, Alexa Decker, Adelya Urmanche, Jaclyn Wiener, Jennifer S. Pardo
Publikováno v:
Language and Speech. 62:378-398
This paper introduces a conversational speech corpus collected during the completion of a map-matching task that is available for research purposes via the Montclair State University Digital Commons Data Repository. The Montclair Map Task is a new, r
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 139:2105-2106
Investigations of phonetic convergence report conflicting results with respect to talker sex. Some studies report that females converge to a greater degree than males, while others find no difference or the opposite pattern. These discrepancies frust
Autor:
Alexa Decker, Keagan Francis, Sherilyn Wilman, Jennifer S. Pardo, Hannah Gash, Jaclyn Wiener, Adelya Urmanche, Sara Parker
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 137:2417-2417
Phonetic convergence has been studied in both speech shadowing tasks and in conversational interaction. In both settings, phonetic convergence has been found to be highly variable, with higher convergence measures usually found in studies that used s
Autor:
Sara Parker, Adelya Urmanche, Alexa Decker, Hannah Gash, Keagan Francis, Jennifer S. Pardo, Jaclyn Wiener
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 135:2420-2420
Many studies have reported phonetic convergence during speech shadowing and conversational interaction, with highly variable results. Some of this variability is likely due to effects of talker sex on phonetic convergence. For example, some studies o