• Title/Summary/Keyword: Stop production

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Evaluation of User Satisfaction for Bus Stop Kiosk DID (버스정류소 키오스크DID 사용자 만족도 조사 연구)

  • Lee, Seungmin;Hwang, Sungwon
    • Journal of Korea Multimedia Society
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.429-436
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    • 2017
  • This study was attempted to improve the utilization of kiosk DID and to establish the production direction of the kiosk DID to be developed in the future, through analysis of kiosk DID user satisfaction at bus stop. This study showed that the satisfaction of the usability of the bus stop kiosk DID was high but in order to enhance the active use of kiosk DID and user satisfaction, unique and interesting content needs to be added and switched, not just simple information but content that users will immerse.

Reinterpretation of Stop Production in Korean Elderly Speakers (노년층 파열음 발음의 재해석)

  • Kim, Ji-Eun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.139-145
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    • 2015
  • Researchers have claimed that Korean younger speakers tend to less clearly differentiate aspirated and lax stops with VOT values while older speakers clearly differentiate these two stops with VOT values. To explain this phenomena, the current study consider both an aging effect and a general sound shift. For this study, VOT values and F0 of Korean stops produced by eight male speakers(years of birth were 1942 ~ 1952) analyzed using Praat. Their productions were compared with the values of participants whose year of birth were 1943 ~ 1952) in Silva(2006)'s research. Silva's research was conducted in 2004 using the same methods. The result shows that 2014's VOT gap between aspirated and lax stops and less F0 gap between aspirated and lax stops than those of 2004. When the F0 values related to physical conditions of the larynx is considered, it could be analyzed as the following: to distinguish the three-way phonation type clearly, older speakers depend on the VOT value more instead of F0 which they have difficulty to control.

Effects of Word Frequency on a Lenition Process: Evidence from Stop Voicing and /h/ Reduction in Korean

  • Choi, Tae-Hwan;Lim, Nam-Sil;Han, Jeong-Im
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.35-48
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    • 2006
  • The present study examined whether words with higher frequency have more exposure to the lenition process such as intervocalic stop voicing or /h/ reduction in the production of the Korean speakers. Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 tested if word-internal intervocalic voicing and /h/ reduction occur more often in the words with higher frequency than less frequent words respectively. Results showed that the rate of voicing was not significantly different between the high frequency group and the low frequency group; rather both high and low frequency words were shown to be fully voiced in this prosodic position. However, intervocalic /h/s were deleted more in high frequency words than in low frequency words. Low frequency words showed that other phonetic variants such as [h] and [w] were found more often than in high frequency group. Thus the results of the present study are indefinitive as to the relationship between the word frequency and lenition with the data at hand.

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Fabrication of a Polysilicon Piezoresistive Accelerometer Using $p^+$ Cantilever Beams ($p^+$ 컨틸레버 빔을 이용한 다결정 실리론 압저항 가속도계의 제작)

  • Ji, Y.H.;Yang, E.H.;Yang, S.S.
    • Proceedings of the KIEE Conference
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    • 1994.11a
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    • pp.416-418
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    • 1994
  • In this study, a silicon piezoresistive accelerometer is designed and fabricated using $p^+$ etch stop layer. The accelerometer consists of a seismic mass and tour cantilevers, and is fabricated mainly by the anisotropic etching method using EPW as an etchant. Eight piezoresistors are properly arranged and connected to make a bridge circuit so that acceleration in only one direction may be measured. The etch stop method is adequate to the mass-production and the precise thickness control of the diaphragms as well, whet compared with the electrochemecal etch stop method.

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A Study on Job Shop Scheduling with Overlapping Production (중첩생산을 고려한 개별생산방식의 일정계획에 관한 연구)

  • 김봉선;이춘선
    • Journal of Korean Society of Industrial and Systems Engineering
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    • v.16 no.28
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    • pp.165-171
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    • 1993
  • The algorithm of Giffler and Thompson is modified for solving job shop scheduling problems related to the overlapping production The start-lag and stop-lag are also applied New priority rules for the overlapping production are proposed and the efficiency of them is compared with that of the classical priority rules.

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Production of English Alphabets by Koreans

  • Yun, Yung-Do;Lee, Hyun-Gu
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.97-120
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    • 2005
  • Production and perception of second language sounds are typically influenced by second language learners' native language sounds. In this study we investigate how the Korean language influences Korean speakers' production of English alphabets. In the experiment conducted to prepare for this study 16 native speakers of Korean pronounced English alphabets. Then three native speakers of English evaluated the Korean subjects' pronunciation of them. The results show that the Korean subjects' native language (i.e., Korean) influences their production of the English alphabets. When Korean has sounds corresponding to English alphabets, the English subjects rate the Korean subjects' production of them good. For instance, Korean has voiceless stop phonemes, hence their production of English alphabets was rated good by the English subjects. The Korean subjects' production of English alphabets containing the sounds that do not exist in Korean was rated poor by the English subjects. For instance, Korean does not have voiced fricative phonemes, hence their production of English alphabets was rated poor.

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Korean speakers' perception and production of English word-final voiceless stop release (한국어 화자의 영어 어말 폐쇄음 파열의 인지와 발음 연구)

  • Lee Borim;Lee Sook-hyang;Park Cheon-Bae;Kang Seok-keun
    • MALSORI
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    • no.38
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    • pp.41-70
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    • 1999
  • Researches on perception have, in recent years, been increasingly popular as a means of accounting for cross-linguistic sound patterns (Ohala, 1992; Hemming, 1995; Jun, 1995; Steriade, 1997 among others). In loanword phonology, Silverman(1990, 1992) argues that words from a source language are scanned through the perceptual level and that the features perceived by a speaker are stored in the input to be processed according to his/her native language's phonological constraints. The purpose of this paper is to test the validity of Silverman's proposal by examining the correlation between perception and production of Korean learners of English. We specifically focussed on perception and production of stop release by contrasting English loanwords with English words loarned through education to see if there were any significant differences. The results showed that there was no substantive correlation between the Korean speakers' perception of the loanwords pronounced by English speakers and their own production of those words. In the case of English words, however, the Korean speakers' production was closely related with their perception, although some inter-speaker variations were observed. With Optimality Theory (Prince & Smolenksy, 1993) as a theoretical framework of analysis, it was shown that the theory is a useful means of implementing a phonetics-phonology interface and relating perceptual processes with speech production. Specifically, under the assumption that loanwords with [t]~[t/sup h/] alternation (e.g.,'cut') are originally borrowed into Korean as two different input forms, all the alternations could be straightforwardly accounted for in terms of a unified ranking of constraints.

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A study of language structure on the relationship between production and perception through English stop word-finals by effects of language, age, and experience. (언어별, 연령별, 경험별 영어 어말 파열음을 통한 발화-인지 구조 연구)

  • Kang, Seok-Han
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2006.11a
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    • pp.139-141
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    • 2006
  • Korean college students' experience in studying English overseas playes the significant role to their perception, not production. Korean Group which experiences foreign-stay for almost 1 year shows the similar pattern with its counterpart, Korean Non- Experiencing Group, in producing the signal of pre-vowel. On the contrary, Korean Experiencing Group shows the similar perceptual pattern with Native Speakers in word-final non-release stops.

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Molecular Cloning of Glycoside Hydrolase Family 74 Genes and Analysis of Transcript Products from the Basidiomycete Phanerochaete chrysosporium (담자균 Phanerochaete chrysosporium으로부터 유래한 Glycoside Hydrolase Family 74 유전자 클로닝과 전사산물 분석)

  • Lee, Jae-Won;Samejima, Masahiro;Choi, In-Gyu
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.56-63
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    • 2006
  • In order to evaluate the mechanism of cellulose hydrolysis, the complementary DNA encoding Glycoside Hydrolase Family (GHF)74 was cloned from Phanerochaete chrysosporium. Depending on the presence of Cellulose Binding Module (CBM), it can be classified as GHF74A or GHF74B. The GHF74A gene from P. chrysosporium (PcGHF74A) consists of 2163 bp encoding a protein of 721 amino acid residues. The PcGHF74A showed homology of 70~77% compared with the GHF74 from other filamentous fungi. The PcGHF74B, which contains CBM and is a member of family 1, was transcribed to various transcripts depending on the nature of carbon sources and their concentration. To study the possible presence of splice variants in GHF74B transcripts in P. chrysospoium, we carried out RT-PCR analysis using primers that designed based on the annotation data and sequenced data. Our result indicated that PcGHF74B was transcribed to several splicing variants in various culture conditions. Especially in the culture of 2% cellulose, three transcript products were observed. First transcript was presumed to be a full length ORF that contained 11th intron with stop codon at position 2562 bp. The second one consisted of 12 exons and 11 introns with stop codon at position 1187 bp with 7th exon. The shortest transcript consisted of 10 exons and 9 introns with stop codon at 910 bp in the 7th exon. These premature stop codon might prevent the synthesis of fully active GHF74 or contribute for the production of protein with distinct function depending on the ambient carbon sources.