Publikationen
Hier finden Sie eine Liste der Publikationen der am Institut für Phonetik und Sprachverarbeitung beschäftigten und mit ihm assoziierten Wissenschaftler. Sie können die Liste durchsuchen und nach Jahr oder nach Publikationstyp sortieren lassen.
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Das IPS hat seit seiner Gründung 1972 in 39 Ausgaben die „Forschungsberichte des Instituts für Phonetik und sprachliche Kommunikation der Universität München (FIPKM)“ herausgegeben. 2002 wurde die Reihe eingestellt. Einige der Ausgaben zwischen 1996 und 2002 sind online abrufbar. Andere Ausgaben sind auf Anfrage in gedruckter Form erhältlich.
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Reference
Jochim, M., Kleber, F. (2017). What Do Finnish and Central Bavarian Have in Common? Towards an Acoustically Based Quantity Typology. In Proceedings of Interspeech 2017, Stockholm, Sweden (pp. 3018-3022).
BibTeX
@inproceedings{jochimWhatFinnishCentral2017, title = {What Do {{Finnish}} and {{Central Bavarian}} Have in Common? {{Towards}} an Acoustically Based Quantity Typology}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {{Interspeech}} 2017, {{Stockholm}}, {{Sweden}}}, author = {Jochim, Markus and Kleber, Felicitas}, year = {2017}, pages = {3018--3022}, address = {Stockholm, Sweden}, doi = {10.21437/Interspeech.2017-1285}, abstract = {The aim of this study was to investigate vowel and consonant quantity in Finnish, a typical quantity language, and to set up a reference corpus for a large-scale project studying the diachronic development of quantity contrasts in German varieties. Although German is not considered a quantity language, both tense and lax vowels and voiced and voiceless stops are differentiated by vowel and closure duration, respectively. The role of these cues, however, has undergone different diachronic changes in various German varieties. To understand the conditions for such prosodic changes, the present study investigates the stability of quantity relations in an undisputed quantity language. To this end, recordings of words differing in vowel and stop length were obtained from seven older and six younger L1 Finnish speakers, both in a normal and a loud voice. We then measured vowel and stop duration and calculated the vowel to vowel-plus-consonant ratio (a measure known to differentiate German VC sequences) as well as the geminate-to-singleton ratio. Results show stability across age groups but variability across speech styles. Moreover, VC ratios were similar for Finnish and Bavarian German speakers. We discuss our findings against the background of a typology of vowel and consonant quantity.} }
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