• Title/Summary/Keyword: syllables

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A Study on Reexamination of the syllable errors of nasal consonant ending for Chinese learners in the Korean language study (중국인 학습자 비음 종성 /ㄴ/, /ㅇ/ 음절의 발음 오류 재고 -한·중 음절 유형을 통하여-)

  • Zhang, Jian
    • Journal of Korean language education
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.251-268
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    • 2017
  • This study is based on differences of syllable type between Korean and Chinese language pronunciation. For example, Nasal consonant ending 【n】 and 【${\eta}$】 reside in both Korean and Chinese phonetics simultaneously. However, in experiential training, Chinese learners will make errors in pronunciation of the Korean syllable nasal consonant ending like 【n】 and 【${\eta}$】. In the previous research, analysis of pronunciation errors were often based on the perspective of phonological system and combination of the phoneme rules. However, in this study, the analysis is based on the differences between Korean and Chinese syllables category to indicate the cause of pronunciation errors. The main findings of this study indicated that in the process of pronunciation of Chinese, nasal consonant syllable rime and its 【back】 tongue vowel are combined with each other. However, this rule does not apply in Korean pronunciation. Therefore, the Korean syllabic types like "앤, 응, 옹, 앵, 은, 온, 언" also exist in the Chinese language. When theChinese learners pronounce these types of syllables, the combination of the voweland nasal syllable rime rule will be taken, which will result in pronunciationerrors.

A Study of Segmental and Syllabic Intervals of Canonical Babbling and Early Speech

  • Chen, Xiaoxiang;Xiao, Yunnan
    • Cross-Cultural Studies
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    • v.28
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    • pp.115-139
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    • 2012
  • Interval or duration of segments, syllables, words and phrases is an important acoustic feature which influences the naturalness of speech. A number of cross-sectional studies regarding acoustic characteristics of children's speech development found that intervals of segments, syllables, words and phrases tend to change with the growing age. One hypothesis assumed that decreases in intervals would be greater when children were younger and smaller decreases in intervals when older (Thelen,1991), it has been supported by quite a number of researches on the basis of cross-sectional studies (Tingley & Allen,1975; Kent & Forner,1980; Chermak & Schneiderman, 1986), but the other hypothesis predicted that decreases in intervals would be smaller when children were younger and greater decreases in intervals when older (Smith, Kenney & Hussain, 1996). Researchers seem to come up with conflicting postulations and inconsistent results about the change trends concerning intervals of segments, syllables, words and phrases, leaving it as an issue unresolved. Most acoustic investigations of children's speech production have been conducted via cross-sectional designs, which involves studying several groups of children. So far, there are only a few longitudinal studies. This issue needs more longitudinal investigations; moreover, the acoustic measures of the intervals of child speech are hardly available. All former studies focus on word stages excluding the babbling stages especially the canonical babbling stage, but we need to find out when concrete changes of intervals begin to occur and what causes the changes. Therefore, we conducted an acoustic study of interval characteristics of segments and words concerning Canonical Babble ( CB) and early speech in an infant aged from 0;9 to 2;4 acquiring Mandarin Chinese. The current research addresses the following two questions: 1. Whether decreases in interval would be greater when children were younger and smaller when they were older or vice versa? 2. Whether the child speech concerning the acoustic features of interval drifts in the direction of the language they are exposed to? The female infant whose L1 was Southern Mandarin living in Changsha was audio- and video-taped at her home for about one hour almost on a weekly basis during her age range from 0;9 to 2;4 under natural observation by us investigators. The recordings were digitized. Parts of the digitized material were labeled. All the repetitions were excluded. The utterances were extracted from 44 sessions ranging from 30 minutes to one hour. The utterances were divided into segments as well as syllable-sized units. Age stages are 0;9-1;0,1;1-1;5, 1;6-2;0, 2;1-2;4. The subject was a monolingual normal child from parents with a good education. The infant was audio-and video-taped in her home almost every week. The data were digitized, segments and syllables from 44 sessions spanning the transition from babble to speech were transcribed in narrow IPA and coded for analysis. Babble was coded from age 0;9-1;0, and words were coded from 1;0 to 2;4, the data has been checked by two professionally trained persons who majored in phonetics. The present investigation is a longitudinal analysis of some temporal characteristics of the child speech during the age periods of 0;9-1;0, 1;1-1;5, 1;6-2;0, 2;1-2;4. The answer to Research Question 1 is that our results are in agreement with neither of the hypotheses. One hypothesis assumed that decreases in intervals would be greater when children were younger and smaller decreases in intervals when older (Thelen,1991); but the other hypothesis predicted that decreases in intervals would be smaller when children were younger and greater decreases in intervals when older (Smith, Kenney & Hussain, 1996). On the whole, there is a tendency of decrease in segmental and syllabic duration with the growing age, but the changes are not drastic and abrupt. For example, /a/ after /k/ in Table 1 has greater decrease during 1;1-1;5, while /a/ after /p/, /t/ and /w/ has greater decrease during 2;1-2;4. /ka/ has greater decrease during 1;1-1;5, while /ta/ and /na/ has greater decrease during 2;1-2;4.Across the age periods, interval change experiences lots of fluctuation all the time. The answer to Research Question 2 is yes. Babbling stage is a period in which the children's acoustic features of intervals of segments, syllables, words and phrases is shifted in the direction of the language to be learned, babbling and children's speech emergence is greatly influenced by ambient language. The phonetic changes in terms of duration would go on until as late as 10-12 years of age before reaching adult-like levels. Definitely, with the increase of exposure to ambient language, the variation would be less and less until they attain the adult-like competence. Via the analysis of the SPSS 15.0, the decrease of segmental and syllabic intervals across the four age periods proves to be of no significant difference (p>0.05). It means that the change of segmental and syllabic intervals is continuous. It reveals that the process of child speech development is gradual and cumulative.

Song Themes and Variation of Yellow-throated Bunting (Emberiza elegans) (노랑턱멧새(Emberiza elegans)의 테마송과 변이)

  • Lee, Won-Ho;Kwon, Ki-Chung
    • Journal of Ecology and Environment
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    • v.29 no.3
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    • pp.219-225
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    • 2006
  • To study song themes and variation of Yellow-throated Bunting, we obtained and analyzed recordings from 45 males breeding in 16 deciduous forests of 6 provinces. We classified the 3,245 songs into a total of 164 song themes and 1,024 song variants according to the identification on the base of difference(lexicon) in 640 syllable compositions. Males had one to six song themes and averaged 3.5 themes. No males shared an identical song theme. Males had $5{\sim}14$ syllables (ave. 9.4) in one song theme and males increased effectively their repertoire size by changing syllable composition (i.e. adding, deleting, or substituting one or more syllables) in a single song theme. The number of variants averaged 5.1 (range 1 to 31) per song theme. Individual variability was highest in the terminal elements of the song. In PCA, the 16 populations are clearly separated on Co. I based on shared syllable and on Co. II based on unique syllable. Similarity of songs based on shared syllables by distance coefficients, showed a pattern of concordance with geography. Pairwise similarity declined with increasing distance among recording sites. 16 different geographical regions by the syllable were divided in UPGMA tree.

A Study on the Brand Name Type of Optical Shop - Centric on Optical Shop in Daegu Region - (안경원의 브랜드 네임 유형에 관한 연구 - 대구지역 안경원 브랜드를 중심으로 -)

  • Hong, Sung-Il;Son, Jeong-Sik
    • Journal of Korean Ophthalmic Optics Society
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.415-423
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    • 2015
  • Purpose: We conducted a study on the brand name types of optical shop in the region of Daegu to exploit the data necessary for a new brand naming. Methods: The characteristics of the names including the concept and function, phrasing compositions - whether the names are Korean words, English words or combination of the two, or others, and whether the names are descriptive, allusive or coined, alternative names, and most frequently used names were studied and analyzed. Results: For those in Korean words, the most frequently appeared consonant was 'ㅇ' then 'ㅅ'. In combination words, either in Korean and English combination or others, 57.1% of the names were in Korean, or 32.7% of the names were in English. As for number of syllables, 3 syllables consumed 30.4% and 2 and 4 syllables were in similar proportions of 29.7% and 25.0%, respectively. The proportions of allusive and descriptive names were 17.0% and 13.3%, respectively. As for alternative creation type, the type with combination of words came first, and then use of symbols came second. For other types, there were high number of brand names that contained the names of other business types and names of the districts in which the stores were located. Lastly, the most frequently used keyword was 'eye', which was used 45 times, and then came 'dang' and 'angyeong'. Conclusions: When starting a business and making an appropriate brand name, it must be easy to say and remember as well as meaningful. As such, a brand name for an optical shop should not only be creative, but also be associated with the business and emanate favorable impression.

The Korean Word Length Effect on Auditory Word Recognition (청각 단어 재인에서 나타난 한국어 단어길이 효과)

  • Choi Wonil;Nam Kichun
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2002.11a
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    • pp.137-140
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    • 2002
  • This study was conducted to examine the korean word length effects on auditory word recognition. Linguistically, word length can be defined by several sublexical units such as letters, phonemes, syllables, and so on. In order to investigate which units are used in auditory word recognition, lexical decision task was used. Experiment 1 and 2 showed that syllable length affected response time, and syllable length interacted with word frequency. As a result, in recognizing auditory word syllable length was important variable.

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A Review of Psychological Studies of Korean Letters and Syllables (한글 낱자 및 글자 인식에 대한 지각심리학적 접근)

  • Kim, Jung-Oh
    • Annual Conference on Human and Language Technology
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    • 1989.10a
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    • pp.114-119
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    • 1989
  • 본 개관 논문은 한글 낱자와 글자 인식에 대한 지각 심리학 분야의 실험들을 그 연구방법, 주체 및 주요 결과 등에서 검토한 다음, 이러한 결과들을 한글 글자 인식에 대한 인공시각적 접근의 연구들과 관련지어 논하였다.

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A study on the Recurrent Predictioni Neural Networks for Syllables Recognition (음절인식을 위한 회귀예측신경망에 관한 연구)

  • 한학용
    • Proceedings of the Acoustical Society of Korea Conference
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    • 1998.08a
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    • pp.272-277
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    • 1998
  • MLP형 예측신경망, Jordan 형과 Elman 형 회귀예측신경망을 사용하여 예측차수오 kdmsslr층이 유니트수의 변화에 따른 인식결과를 CHMM과 비교하였다. 음성데이타는 100음절데이터와 ETRI 의 샘돌이 숫자음을 사용하였다. 숫자음에서 신경망의 인식률은 98.5%로 5상태 CHMM의 85.6%보다는 향상된 인식성능을 보였으며 6상태 이상의 CHMM보다는 다소 인식률이 낮게 나타났다.

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Speech synthesis system using Korean prosodic rules (한국어 운율규칙을 이용한 음성합성시스템)

  • 이기영
    • Proceedings of the Acoustical Society of Korea Conference
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    • 1998.08a
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    • pp.356-359
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    • 1998
  • This paper proposes the speech synthesis method using Korean prosodic rules as an important technique for Korean speech synthesis. The prosodic model for speech synthesis is composed of accentual phrases and intonational phrases which are derived from hierarchical structure of prosody. This prosodic model controls duration time, intonation and pause of synthesized speech. Synthesis units constitute of demi-syllables and VCV-triphones which can make unlimited vocabularies, and TD-PSOLA is used a sthe synthesis method.

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A Study on the Feature Extraction for the Segmentation of Korean Speech (한국어 음성 분할을 위한 특징 검출에 관한 연구)

  • Lee, Geuk;Hwang, Hee-Yeung
    • Proceedings of the KIEE Conference
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    • 1987.11a
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    • pp.338-340
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    • 1987
  • The speech recognition system usually consists of two modules, segmentation module and identification module. So, the performance of the system heavily depends on the segmentation accuracy and the segmentation unit. This paper is concerned with the agreeable features for segmentation in syllables. Total energy and two band width energy. (LE:4000-5000Hz and HE:900-3100Hz) are suitable cues for segmentation. And we testify it through the experiment using connected digit.

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The Korean Text-to-speech Using Syllable Units (음절 단위를 이용한 한국어 음성 합성)

  • 김병수;윤기선;박성한
    • Journal of the Korean Institute of Telematics and Electronics
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.143-150
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    • 1990
  • In this paper, a rule-based method for improving the intelligibility of synthetic speech is proposed. A 12-pole linear prediction coding method is used to model syllable speech signals. A syllable concatenation rule for pause and frame rejection between syllables is developed to improve the naturalness of the synthetic speech. In addition, phonoligical structure transform rule and prosody rule are applied to the synthetic speech by LPC. The illustrative results demonstrate that the synthetic speech obtained by applying these rules has better naturalness than the synthetic speech by LPC.

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