• Title/Summary/Keyword: Phonetics

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A Longitudinal Study of Korean Vowel Production by Chinese Learners of Korean (중국인 학습자가 발음한 한국어 단모음에 대한 종단 연구)

  • Kim, Jooyeon
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.71-79
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    • 2013
  • This study provided longitudinal examination of the Chinese learners' acquisition of the Korean vowels. Specifically the author examined whether Korean monophthongs are acquired rapidly in early stages of learning (Flege, Munro and Skelton, 1992; Munro and Derwing, 2008) or they develop rather gradually in proportion to the learners' experience (Byee, 2001; Ellis, 2006). This study collected the Korean vowel production by 23 Chinese learners for a year, and then analysed F1 and F2 of each Korean vowel. The results showed that 1) Most of the second language (L2) vowels were rapidly improved during the first six or nine months of Korean learning before reaching the constant stage; and 2) The exact acquisition trajectories varied across the seven vowels. Specifically the vowels which were acquired in the early stage of learning were /i, e, ɨ/ for F1 and /ʌ, e, o, u/ for F2. Thus this study supports the hypothesis of Flege et al. (1992) and Munro and Derwing (2008) except the fact that each vowel showed the different learning route.

The influence of utterance length on speech rate in spontaneous speech (자연발화 음성 코퍼스에서 발화 속도에 대한 발화 길이의 영향)

  • Kim, Jungsun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.9-17
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    • 2017
  • The current study examined speech rate and its variance in spontaneous Seoul Korean speech. The current study focused on factors affecting the variance of speech rate such as utterance length, individual speakers, and gender. The results revealed that, first, utterance length has a significant influence on speech rate. Longer utterances were spoken at a faster rate. Second, regarding the effect of utterance length, individual speakers differed significantly in their speaking rate. The variation between speakers and within speakers tended to increase as utterance length increases. Third, there were speakers' gender differences, indicating that males produced considerably faster speaking rate than females. Additionally, the current study implied that non-linguistic factors in spontaneous speech can affect the variance of speakers' speaking rate.

Correlations between pronunciation test scores given by Korean/Nativel/ILT(Interactive Language Tutor) raters against the Korean-spoken English sentences (한국인의 영어 문장 발음에 대한 한국인/원어민/ILT(Interactive Language Tutor) 평가 점수 사이의 상관관계)

  • Rhee Seok-Chae;Park Jeon Gue
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2003.10a
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    • pp.83-88
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    • 2003
  • This study carried out an experimental English pronunciation assessment to see the differences in the relationship between the different rater categories. The result shows that i) correlation between Korean and Native American raters is high(r=.98) enough to be considered reliable, ii) previous instructions about assessment rubric and the knowledge about English phonetics and phonology exert little influence on the rating scores, iii) correlation between the automatic ILT(Interactive Language Tutor) rating using speech recognition technology and Natives' rating is stronger than that between ILT and Koreans' rating.

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Perception and Production of English Front Vowels by Korean Speakers

  • Kim, Ji-Eun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.51-58
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    • 2010
  • This study investigates the perception and production of English front vowels focusing on the distinction in /i/ vs /I/ and /$\varepsilon$/ vs /$\ae$/ by sixty-one Korean speakers. The first portion of this study focused on the perceptional discrimination by the subjects of two sets of English vowel contrasts, /i/ vs /I/ and /$\varepsilon$/ vs /$\ae$/. In the second portion of the study, the production of these vowels by the same subjects who had participated in the perceptional discrimination test was examined acoustically and subsequently compared with that of the control group comprised of native English speakers. The major results indicate that: (1) In perception tests, Korean subjects can discriminate between /i/ and /I/ relatively well, while many of them were not able to discriminate between /$\varepsilon$/ and /$\ae$/; (2) the Korean subjects, however, have difficulty producing a distinct version of these front vowels; and, (3) The relationship between the perception and production is not significant. These results were analyzed with the concept of "under-differentiation" and "reinterpretation of distinction," as well as how phonetic differences influenced the production and discrimination of front vowels by Korean speakers.

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The Role of Pitch Range Reset in Korean Sentence Processing

  • Kong, Eun-Jong
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.33-39
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    • 2010
  • This study investigates the effect of pitch range reset in Korean listeners' processing of syntactically ambiguous participle structures. Unlike Japanese and English,in Korean, the downtrend or the reset of pitch range does not consistently differentiate Accentual Phrases (AP), a lower level of phrasing, from Intonational Phrases (IP), a higher level of phrasing. Therefore, we explore Korean listeners' comprehension patterns for syntactically ambiguous speech strings varying in 1) the relative height of F0 peaks across prosodic units, and 2) the types of prosodic phrasing, to see whether pitch range reset informs the recovery of syntactic structure even though it is not reflected in the intonational hierarchy in Korean. The results show that the hierarchical level of prosodic phrasing affects the parsing pattern of syntactic ambiguity. The pitch range reset also cued the location of syntactic boundaries, but this effect was confined to phrases across AP.

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A Study on the Phonetic Discrimination and Acquisition Ability of Korean Language Learners (한국어 학습자의 음성 변별 능력과 음운 습득 능력의 상관성에 관한 연구)

  • Jung, Mi-Ji;Kwon, Sung-Mi
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.23-32
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    • 2010
  • This study aimed at discovering whether Korean language learners who had never been exposed to Korean phones before could distinguish Korean phones and whether learners who had comparatively better ability of identifying phonetic differences displayed a better result in acquiring Korean phonemes. The study conducted two experiments on 25 learners. In Experiment I, an oddball test (ABX) was performed to investigate the learners' ability to discriminate Korean phones on the first day of the course. In Experiment II, an identification test was administered to analyze the ability of identifying Korean phones on the same learners after three weeks of language instruction. The results revealed that the true-beginner learners demonstrated different phonetic discrimination abilities, but these abilities did not seem to correlate with the rate of acquisition.

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Intelligibility Improvement Benefit of Clear Speech and Korean Stops

  • Kang, Kyoung-Ho
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.3-11
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    • 2010
  • The present study confirmed the intelligibility improvement benefit of clear speech by investigating the intelligibility of Korean stops produced in different speaking styles: conversational, citation-form, and clear speech. This finding supports the Hypo- & Hyper-speech theory that speakers adjust vocal effort to accommodate hearers' speech perception difficulty. A progressive intelligibility improvement was found for the three speaking styles investigated: clear speech was more intelligible than citation-form speech citation-form speech was more intelligible than conversational speech and clear speech was also more intelligible than conversational speech. These findings suggest that the manipulations to elicit three distinct speaking styles in a laboratory setting were successful. Korean lenis stops showed the least intelligibility improvement among the three Korean stop types, and this result suggests that lenis stops should be more resistant to intelligibility enhancement efforts in clear speech than aspirated and fortis stops.

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Bilingual Voice Conversion Using Frequency Warping on Formant Space (포만트 공간에서의 주파수 변환을 이용한 이중 언어 음성 변환 연구)

  • Chae, Yi-Geun;Yun, Young-Sun;Jung, Jin Man;Eun, Seongbae
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.133-139
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    • 2014
  • This paper describes several approaches to transform a speaker's individuality to another's individuality using frequency warping between bilingual formant frequencies on different language environments. The proposed methods are simple and intuitive voice conversion algorithms that do not use training data between different languages. The approaches find the warping function from source speaker's frequency to target speaker's frequency on formant space. The formant space comprises four representative monophthongs for each language. The warping functions can be represented by piecewise linear equations, inverse matrix. The used features are pure frequency components including magnitudes, phases, and line spectral frequencies (LSF). The experiments show that the LSF-based voice conversion methods give better performance than other methods.

An acoustic study of fricated vowels in Nuosu Yi: an exploratory study

  • Perkins, Jeremy;Lee, Seunghun J.;Li, Xiao;Liu, Hongyong
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.109-115
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    • 2014
  • Fricated nuclei in Nuosu Yi were found to be more correctly described as fricated vowels, rather than syllabic fricatives due to the presence of clear formant structures typical of front vowels. In this exploratory study, two types of fricated nuclei were examined: retroflex "yr" and non-retroflex "y". The retroflex nucleus "yr" had higher F1 and lower F3 than non-retroflex "y", indicating a lower tongue height. On the other hand, F2 was found to correlate not with nucleus retroflexion, but instead with onset consonant retroflexion: F2 was higher following retroflex onsets, in both vowels. This effect was persistent through the entire vowel, suggesting a phonological effect, rather than a coarticulatory one. Interpretation of the F2 results require accompanying articulatory data since the usual coupling of F2 and tongue backness does not always hold for retroflex vowels. Examining the articulation of the fricated nuclei in Nuosu Yi is a direction for future research.

HMM-based missing feature reconstruction for robust speech recognition in additive noise environments (가산잡음환경에서 강인음성인식을 위한 은닉 마르코프 모델 기반 손실 특징 복원)

  • Cho, Ji-Won;Park, Hyung-Min
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.127-132
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    • 2014
  • This paper describes a robust speech recognition technique by reconstructing spectral components mismatched with a training environment. Although the cluster-based reconstruction method can compensate the unreliable components from reliable components in the same spectral vector by assuming an independent, identically distributed Gaussian-mixture process of training spectral vectors, the presented method exploits the temporal dependency of speech to reconstruct the components by introducing a hidden-Markov-model prior which incorporates an internal state transition plausible for an observed spectral vector sequence. The experimental results indicate that the described method can provide temporally consistent reconstruction and further improve recognition performance on average compared to the conventional method.