澳洲英语元音口音的影响及其与发音道参数的关系

D. Dersch, Chris Cléirigh, Julie Vonwiller
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摘要

在本文中,我们分析和比较了元音的低维语言表征与来自澳大利亚英语母语者的高维原型元音模板。我们进一步对黎巴嫩口音和越南口音的英语进行了相同的分析,以调查由于口音导致的di(cid:11)引用如何影响这种表示。在低维语言表征中,元音由发音道参数表征。为了简化问题,该研究仅限于元音,至少在理论上,涉及一个稳定的状态的发音,即一个稳定的目标结构(cid:12)舌头,嘴唇和下巴在前后发音转换之间。元音是由舌头上与某个特定元音的关键发音有关的部分的水平和垂直位置来表示的,例如,高或低,前或后。再加上嘴唇的姿势,张开或圆润。原型元音模板推导如下。声压信号的参数化是12梅尔频率倒频谱coe(cid:14)个客户。在每个语音标记段的中心,提取180维电话模板。对于短元音组(/I/, /E/, /A/, /O/, /V/, /U/, /@/)和长元音组(/I:/, /E:/, /A:/, /O:/, /U:/, /@:/),我们通过平均每个元音类和重音的所有模板来获得元音簇。演讲材料演讲材料取自澳大利亚国家口语数据库(AN-DOSL)。为了比较来自语音样本的高维元音簇和发音道表示中的低维原型元音,我们在二维空间中通过多维缩放变换进行降维。在这里,线性变换通过优化数据向量之间的相对距离将高维空间映射到低维子空间上。作为一个重要的结果,我们(cid:12)和。I) /@/和/@:/被剩余的元音包围;Ii)整体结构和原型元音之间的相对距离非常相似。这种结构的变化可以用澳大利亚本土英语、黎巴嫩阿拉伯语和越南南部口音的不同来解释。
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The influence of accents in australian English vowels and their relation to articulatory tract parameters
In this paper we analyse and compare a low dimensional linguistic representation of vowels with high dimensional prototypical vowel templates derived from a native Australian English speaker. We further perform the same analysis on Lebanese and Vietnamese accented English to investigate how di(cid:11)erences due to accents impact on such a representation. In a low dimensional linguistic representation a vowel is characterised by articulatory tract parameters. To simplify the problem, the study is restricted to vowels that, notionally at least, involve a steady state articulation i.e. a stable target con(cid:12)guration of tongue, lips and jaw between preceding and following articulatory transitions. Vowels are represented by the horizontal and vertical position of the part of the tongue involved in the key articulation of a particular vowel, e.g., high or low and front or back. To this is added lip posture, spread or rounded. Prototypical vowel templates are derived as follows. The sound pressure signal is parametrized by 12 mel-frequency cepstrum coe(cid:14)cients. At the centre of each phonetically labelled segment, 180 dimensional phone templates are extracted. For the group of short (/I/, /E/, /A/, /O/, /V/, /U/, /@/) and long vowels (/i:/, /e:/, /a:/, /o:/, /u:/, /@:/) we obtain vowel clusters by averaging over all templates of each vowel class and accent. The speech materiaThe speech material is taken from the Australian National Database Of Spoken Language (AN-DOSL). For a comparison of high dimensional vowel clusters derived from speech samples with low dimensional prototypical vowels in the articulatory tract representation we perform a reduction in dimension by a multidimensional scaling transformation in a two dimensional space. Here, a linear transformation maps a high dimensional space on a lower dimensional sub space by optimising the relative distances between data vectors. As an important result we (cid:12)nd. i) /@/ and /@:/ are surrounded by the remaining vowels; ii) the overall structure and the relative distances between the prototypical vowels are very similar. Varia-tions in the structure can be explained by the in(cid:13)uence of native Australian English, Lebanese Arabic and South Vietnamese accents.
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