1 / 1

The distribution of the duration of the 4185 schwas (fig.2) is divided into 2 sub-groups :

(1). Figure 2 : Distribution of the schwa durations. gap. (2). Nb of occurrences. Schwa duration.

genera
Télécharger la présentation

The distribution of the duration of the 4185 schwas (fig.2) is divided into 2 sub-groups :

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. (1) Figure 2: Distribution of the schwa durations gap (2) Nb of occurrences Schwa duration ON THE CATEGORICAL NATURE OF THE PROCESS INVOLVED IN SCHWA ELISION IN FRENCHA. Bürki¹², C. Fougeron¹ & C. Gendrot¹ ¹Laboratoire de Phonétique et Phonologie, UMR 7018, CNRS-Paris 3/Sorbonne Nouvelle, France²Laboratoire de Psycholinguistique Expérimentale, Université de Genève, Suisse I. INTRODUCTION Research question: Does the realizations of schwa follow a continuous pattern of reduction ranging from a full vowel realization to a fully absent vowel, or do two categories emerge: full vowels on one side, and completely deleted vowels on the other side? • Prediction fora categorical alternation process: bimodal distribution of the schwa durations, with a gap between 2 groups (schwa-full and schwa-less forms). • Prediction for a gradual reduction process: continuous distribution towards 0 duration(i.e. schwa-less form = end-point of the gradual reduction process). Schwa elision in French = alternation between 2 variants of a same lexical entry with or without its schwa, e.g. ‘fenêtre’ (window) pronounced either with a schwa-full form [ft] or with a schwa-less form [ft] . Traditional phonological accounts assume that this alternation process is complete and results from a rule-based segmental process. Aim:determining whether experimental evidence can be found to assess the categorical nature of this process by analyzing the different realizations of words containing a schwa in the ESTER corpus (Galliano & al., 2005). II. METHOD (1) Creation of a repertory of 18553 French words containing a schwa. (2) Selection of words recognized by the IRISA automatic recognition system as being produced in the corpus in their schwa-less and schwa-full forms. (3) Manual examination and correction of the output of the automatic recognition system. Criteria for determining the presence/duration of schwa: - Realized schwa: voiced portion + formant structure - Onset and offset of the vowels: determined on signal periodicity and apparition / disappearance of F2 (Figure 1). (4)Analysis of the schwa durations of these words Figure 1: Schwa-full occurrence of the word ‘semaine’ (week). Manual segmentation according to the determined criteria. III. RESULTS The distribution of the duration of the 4185 schwas (fig.2) is divided into 2 sub-groups: (1) 29% of the words produced with a complete absence of voicing & formant structure, i.e. forms realized without a vocalic portion (e.g. fig. 3) (2) 71% of the occurrences present a vocalic portion corresponding to a schwa, i.e. forms realized with a vocalic portion (e.g. fig. 4). (The distribution of the duration of these schwa-full forms is unimodal and close to normality.) The distribution of schwa duration is not continuous but present a gap in the distribution between 0 and 16 ms. The distribution of the duration of the 4185 schwas (fig.2) is divided into 2 sub-groups: (1) 29% of the words produced with a complete absence of voicing & formant structure, i.e. forms realized without a vocalic portion (e.g. fig. 3) (2) 71% of the occurrences present a vocalic portion corresponding to a schwa, i.e. forms realized with a vocalic portion (e.g. fig. 4). (The distribution of the duration of these schwa-full forms is unimodal and close to normality.) The distribution of schwa duration is not continuous but present a gap in the distribution between 0 and 16 ms. Figure 3 and 4: Schwa-less (left) and schwa-full (right) occurrences of the word ‘sera’ (will be). IV. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION IV. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION • The bimodal distribution seems to support the categorical nature of the process. • However, the gap between the two groups could be a by-product of the criteriachosen to define the acoustical interval corresponding to schwa. Nonetheless, modifying our segmentation criteria to include realizationssuch as fig. 5would not have changed the distribution to support a continuous gradual process. (If realizations such as fig. 5 were categorized as schwa-full, it would not inflate the distribution in the gap region, but rather the left tail of group 2.) Interpretation :The distribution of schwa duration is explained by both a categorical and a gradual process. • a phonological categorical alternation process accounts for the leftmost mode of the distributionand the gapbetween the 2 groups. • a gradual phonetic process of reductionaccounts for the gradual temporal reductionwithin the rightmost group of the schwa-full forms. A thorough analysis of the 1215 occurrences included in the leftmost mode (categorized as schwa-less) is needed to confirm our interpretation. Figure 5: Realization of the word ‘avenir’ (future). The portion of increased intensity between [v] and [n] (25ms) could be attributed to a devoiced vowel.

More Related