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
Silva, S., Almeida, N., Cunha, C., Joseph, A., Frahm, J., Teixeira, A. (2020). Data-Driven Critical Tract Variable Determination for European Portuguese. Information, 11(10), 491-513.
BibTeX
@article{silvaDataDrivenCriticalTract2020, title = {Data-{{Driven Critical Tract Variable Determination}} for {{European Portuguese}}}, author = {Silva, Samuel and Almeida, Nuno and Cunha, Concei{\c c}{\~a}o and Joseph, Arun and Frahm, Jens and Teixeira, Ant{\'o}nio}, year = {2020}, journal = {Information}, volume = {11}, number = {10}, pages = {491--513}, doi = {doi:10.3390/info11100491}, abstract = {Technologies, such as real-time magnetic resonance (RT-MRI), can provide valuable information to evolve our understanding of the static and dynamic aspects of speech by contributing to the determination of which articulators are essential (critical) in producing specific sounds and how (gestures). While a visual analysis and comparison of imaging data or vocal tract profiles can already provide relevant findings, the sheer amount of available data demands and can strongly profit from unsupervised data-driven approaches. Recent work, in this regard, has asserted the possibility of determining critical articulators from RT-MRI data by considering a representation of vocal tract configurations based on landmarks placed on the tongue, lips, and velum, yielding meaningful results for European Portuguese (EP). Advancing this previous work to obtain a characterization of EP sounds grounded on Articulatory Phonology, important to explore critical gestures and advance, for example, articulatory speech synthesis, entails the consideration of a novel set of tract variables. To this end, this article explores critical variable determination considering a vocal tract representation aligned with Articulatory Phonology and the Task Dynamics framework. The overall results, obtained considering data for three EP speakers, show the applicability of this approach and are consistent with existing descriptions of EP sounds.} }
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