• Title/Summary/Keyword: consonants and vowels

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The Influence of Consonant Environment upon the Vowel Duration (모음 길이에 미치는 자음 환경의 영향)

  • Koo, Hee-San
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.7-17
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    • 1998
  • The purpose of this preliminary study on Korean vowel duration was to find how different syllable types and kinds of plosives influence vowel duration. The vowel duration of the Front Mid and Low vowels (/$\varepsilon$/(에), /e/(어), /${\ae}$/(애), /a/(아)) was found to be longer than that of High and Back vowels (/i/(이), /i/(으), /u/(우), /o/(오)). Compared with single vowels (V), Vowels followed by a consonant (CV) were shortened by 79.3% and vowels between consonants (CVC) were shortened by 38.5%, respectively. These results suggest that the influence of consonants upon Korean vowel duration depend on syllble types and the manner or place of articulation.

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The methods of recognition of consonants(voiced stops) by Neural Network (신경망에 의한 초성자음(ㄱ, ㄷ, ㅂ)의 인식방법)

  • 김석동
    • Proceedings of the Acoustical Society of Korea Conference
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    • 1991.06a
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    • pp.73-77
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    • 1991
  • As the basic analysis to solve the stop consonants in phoneme based speech recognition using Back Propagation learning algorithm, changes in hidden units, training set and iteration. Also we propose an efficient processing method of separation between consonants and vowels.

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A Study on the Mandibular Rest Position Initial, Medial (한글의 첫소리, 가운데 소리, 끝소리의 발성과 하악 안정위에 관한 연구)

  • Lee, Jae-Bong;Chang, Wan-Shik
    • The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.61-81
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    • 1985
  • The purpose of the this article was to determine the ideal Korean phonemes for the mandibular rest position. The subjects were 30 dentists and dental students who had normal occlusion and speech patterns. To determine the amount of mandibular opening, MKG was used for this study. The results were as follows: 1. The average mandibular rest position of Korean were -0.75(0.55)mm in horizontal plot (X), and -1.21(0.54) mm in vertical plot (Y). 2. The ideal medial sounds for the mandibular rest position were '으', '우' and '이'. 3. The ideal Korean consonants for the mandibular rest position were affricatives (ㅈ, ㅊ, ㅉ) and fricatives (ㅅ, ㅆ), vowels were back closed vowels (ㅡ, ㅜ). 4. The last consonants were affected by the proceeding vowels. 5. In Korean, the vowels were the most important factors that determine the rest position of mandible.

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Lip Shape Synthesis of the Korean Syllable for Human Interface (휴먼인터페이스를 위한 한글음절의 입모양합성)

  • 이용동;최창석;최갑석
    • The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.614-623
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    • 1994
  • Synthesizing speech and facial images is necessary for human interface that man and machine converse naturally as human do. The target of this paper is synthesizing the facial images. In synthesis of the facial images a three-dimensional (3-D) shape model of the face is used for realizating the facial expression variations and the lip shape variations. The various facial expressions and lip shapes harmonized with the syllables are synthesized by deforming the three-dimensional model on the basis of the facial muscular actions. Combications with the consonants and the vowels make 14.364 syllables. The vowels dominate most lip shapes but the consonants do a part of them. For determining the lip shapes, this paper investigates all the syllables and classifies the lip shapes pattern according to the vowels and the consonants. As the results, the lip shapes are classified into 8 patterns for the vowels and 2patterns for the consonants. In advance, the paper determines the synthesis rules for the classified lip shape patterns. This method permits us to obtain the natural facial image with the various facial expressions and lip shape patterns.

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Classification of nasal places of articulation based on the spectra of adjacent vowels (모음 스펙트럼에 기반한 전후 비자음 조음위치 판별)

  • Jihyeon Yun;Cheoljae Seong
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.25-34
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    • 2023
  • This study examined the utility of the acoustic features of vowels as cues for the place of articulation of Korean nasal consonants. In the acoustic analysis, spectral and temporal parameters were measured at the 25%, 50%, and 75% time points in the vowels neighboring nasal consonants in samples extracted from a spontaneous Korean speech corpus. Using these measurements, linear discriminant analyses were performed and classification accuracies for the nasal place of articulation were estimated. The analyses were applied separately for vowels following and preceding a nasal consonant to compare the effects of progressive and regressive coarticulation in terms of place of articulation. The classification accuracies ranged between approximately 50% and 60%, implying that acoustic measurements of vowel intervals alone are not sufficient to predict or classify the place of articulation of adjacent nasal consonants. However, given that these results were obtained for measurements at the temporal midpoint of vowels, where they are expected to be the least influenced by coarticulation, the present results also suggest the potential of utilizing acoustic measurements of vowels to improve the recognition accuracy of nasal place. Moreover, the classification accuracy for nasal place was higher for vowels preceding the nasal sounds, suggesting the possibility of higher anticipatory coarticulation reflecting the nasal place.

An Experimental Study of Korean Dialectal Speech (한국어 방언 음성의 실험적 연구)

  • Kim, Hyun-Gi;Choi, Young-Sook;Kim, Deok-Su
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.49-65
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    • 2006
  • Recently, several theories on the digital speech signal processing expanded the communication boundary between human beings and machines drastically. The aim of this study is to collect dialectal speech in Korea on a large scale and to establish a digital speech data base in order to provide the data base for further research on the Korean dialectal and the creation of value-added network. 528 informants across the country participated in this study. Acoustic characteristics of vowels and consonants are analyzed by Power spectrum and Spectrogram of CSL. Test words were made on the picture cards and letter cards which contained each vowel and each consonant in the initial position of words. Plot formants were depicted on a vowel chart and transitions of diphthongs were compared according to dialectal speech. Spectral times, VOT, VD, and TD were measured on a Spectrogram for stop consonants, and fricative frequency, intensity, and lateral formants (LF1, LF2, LF3) for fricative consonants. Nasal formants (NF1, NF2, NF3) were analyzed for different nasalities of nasal consonants. The acoustic characteristics of dialectal speech showed that young generation speakers did not show distinction between close-mid /e/ and open-mid$/\epsilon/$. The diphthongs /we/ and /wj/ showed simple vowels or diphthongs depending to dialect speech. The sibilant sound /s/ showed the aspiration preceded to fricative noise. Lateral /l/ realized variant /r/ in Kyungsang dialectal speech. The duration of nasal consonants in Chungchong dialectal speech were the longest among the dialects.

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Phoneme distribution and syllable structure of entry words in the CMU English Pronouncing Dictionary

  • Yang, Byunggon
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.11-16
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    • 2016
  • This study explores the phoneme distribution and syllable structure of entry words in the CMU English Pronouncing Dictionary to provide phoneticians and linguists with fundamental phonetic data on English word components. Entry words in the dictionary file were syllabified using an R script and examined to obtain the following results: First, English words preferred consonants to vowels in their word components. In addition, monophthongs occurred much more frequently than diphthongs. When all consonants were categorized by manner and place, the distribution indicated the frequency order of stops, fricatives, and nasals according to manner and that of alveolars, bilabials and velars according to place. These results were comparable to the results obtained from the Buckeye Corpus (Yang, 2012). Second, from the analysis of syllable structure, two-syllable words were most favored, followed by three- and one-syllable words. Of the words in the dictionary, 92.7% consisted of one, two or three syllables. This result may be related to human memory or decoding time. Third, the English words tended to exhibit discord between onset and coda consonants and between adjacent vowels. Dissimilarity between the last onset and the first coda was found in 93.3% of the syllables, while 91.6% of the adjacent vowels were different. From the results above, the author concludes that an analysis of the phonetic symbols in a dictionary may lead to a deeper understanding of English word structures and components.

The Analysis and Recognition of Korean Speech Signal using the Phoneme (음소에 의한 한국어 음성의 분석과 인식)

  • Kim, Yeong-Il;Lee, Geon-Gi;Lee, Mun-Su
    • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Korea
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.38-47
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    • 1987
  • As Korean language can be phonemically classified according to the characteristic and structure of its pronunciation, Korean syllables can be divided into the phonemes such as consonant and vowel. The divided phonemes are analyzed by using the method of partial autocorrelation, and the order of partial autocorelation coefficient is 15. In analysis, it is shown that each characteristic of the same consonants, vowels, and end consonant in syllables in similar. The experiments is carried out by dividing 675 syllables into consonants, vowels, and end consonants. The recognition rate of consonants, vowels, end-consonants, and syllables are $85.0(\%)$, $90.7(\%)$, $85.5(\%)$and $72.1(\%)$ respectively. In conclusion, it is shown that Korean syllables, divided by the phonemes, are analyzed and recognized with minimum data and short processing time. Furthermore, it is shown that Korean syllables, words and sentences are recognized in the same way.

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A COMPUTER ANALYSIS ON THE KOREAN CONSONANT SOUND DISTORTION IN RELATION TO THE PALATAL PLATE THICKNESS -Dentoalveolar and hard palatal consonant- (구개상의 두께에 따른 한국어 자음의 발음 변화에 관한 컴퓨터 분석 - 치조음, 경구개음-)

  • Woo, Yi-Hyung;Choi, Dae-Kyun;Choi, Boo-Byung;Park, Nam-Soo
    • The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.71-94
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    • 1987
  • This study was carried out to investigate the sound distortion following the alternation of the palatal plate thickness. For this study, 2 healthy male subjects (24-year-old) were selected. Born in Seoul, they both spoke Seoul dialect. First, their sounds of /na(나)/, /da(다)/, /1a(라)/, /ja(자)/, /cha(차)/, /ta(타)/, without inserting plates were recorded, and then the sounds with palatal plates of different thickness were recorded, successively. The plate was fabricated in 3 types, each palatal thickness being 1.0mm, 2.5mm, dentoalveolar portion 2.5mm, other residual portion was 1.0mm, successively. Each type plates named B, C, D-type, in succession. Series of analysis were administered through Computer(16 bit) to analyze the sound distortions. These experiments were analyzed by the LPC (without weighting, pre-weighting, post-weighting) of the consonants, vowels portion, formant frequency of the vowels and word duration of the consonants. The findings led to the following conclusions: 1. There was no correlation of the distortion rate on the 2 informants. 2. Generally, vowels were not affected by the palatal plate thickness in the formant analysis, however, more distortion was detected in the LPC analysis, especially C, D-type plates. 3. Consonants distortion was more evident in the C, D-type plate. 4. The second formant was most disturbed and reduced in the all consonants with insertion of the palatal plate, especially C, D-type plate. 5. Word duration was shortened in the plate inserted(except /ja/, /cha/), especially C, D-type. 6. It was found that dentoalveolar, hard palatal sounds were severely distorted in plate inserted, and they were mainly affected by the dentoalveolar portion thickness. 7. There was correlation between palatal thickness and consonants quality.

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Korean Native Speakers' Perception of English Sounds According to the Groupings of Phonetic Contrasts

  • Kim, Gi-Na;Kim, Soo-Jin
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.59-67
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    • 2003
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate Korean native speakers' perception of English sounds according to groupings of phonetic contrasts. The four groupings looked at were vowels, voicing (voiced-unvoiced), fricatives with difference in place of articulation, and other clusters of specific sound contrasts, such as stop-fricatives and liquids. The position of a sound in syllable was also examined. According to the results of ANOVA and a post-hoc analysis, the perception of vowels, in the medial position was different from that of consonants in the initial and final position. Vowels proved to be the most difficult group to perceive correctly. With the consonants, there was not a big difference whether the contrasts came initially or finally. The order of difficulty was liquids, fricatives, stop-fricatives, and finally voicing.

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