Modeling and synthesis of English regional accents with pitch and duration correlates

نویسندگان

  • Qin Yan
  • Saeed Vaseghi
چکیده

This paper provides an introduction to the acoustic–phonetic structure of English regional accents and presents a signal processing method for the modeling and transformation of the acoustic correlates of English accents for example from British English to American English. The focus of this paper is on the modeling of intonation and duration correlates of accents as the modeling of formants is described in previous papers (Yan et al., 2007; Vaseghi et al., 2009). The intonation correlates of accents are modeled with the statistics of a set of broad features of the pitch contour. The statistical models of phoneme durations and word speaking rates are obtained from automatic segmentation of word/phoneme boundaries of speech databases. A contribution of this paper is the use of accent synthesis for comparative evaluation of the causal effects of the acoustic correlates of accent. The differences between the acoustics–phonetic realizations of British Received Pronunciation (RP), Broad Australian (BAU) and General American (GenAm) English accents are modeled and used in an accent transformation and synthesis method for evaluation of the influence of formant, pitch and duration on conveying accents. 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

On the acoustic correlates of high and low nuclear pitch accents in American English

Earlier findings in Shue et al. (2007, 2008) raised questions about the alignment of nuclear pitch accents in American English, which are addressed here by eliciting both high and low pitch accents in two different target words in several different positions in a single-phrase utterance (early, late but not final, and final) from 20 speakers (10 male, 10 female). Results show that the F0 peak a...

متن کامل

Stress, duration, and intonation in Arabic word-level prosody

This paper presents the results of a study of the expression of word-level prosody in Jordanian Arabic. The study focuses on the durational, spectral, and fundamental frequency correlates of stress and word-"nal juncture in the speech of four speakers. Speakers exhibit extensive "nal lengthening e!ects and a smaller e!ect of stress and penultimate lengthening. Stress lengthening correlates with...

متن کامل

Stress and accent: acoustic correlates of metrical prominence in Catalan

This study examines the phonetic correlates of stress and accent in Catalan, analyzing syllable duration, spectral balance, vowel quality, and overall intensity in two stress [stressed, unstressed] and in two accent conditions [accented, unaccented]. Catalan reveals systematic phonetic differences between accent and stress, consistent with previous work on Dutch, English, and Spanish (Slujter &...

متن کامل

The prosody of broad and narrow focus in English: two experiments

In English, the focus of a sentence is an important factor in determining the prosody of an utterance. Some linguistic analyses of focus [9][10][11] claim that (1) prosodic representation of focus is determined by pitch accents, (2) the distribution of pitch accents is determined by the size of the focus constituent, and (3) one pro-sodic realization may be ambiguous for several focus constitue...

متن کامل

The generation of regional pronunciations of English for speech synthesis

Welsh and Northern English), and two American ones (New York and South Carolina, to represent Eastern and Southern American); regional features were based primarily on the descriptions in [1], with native-speaker input where possible. The regional accents are abbreviated in this paper as: Br(Sc) = Edinburgh; Br(W) = Cardiff; Br(N) = Leeds; Am(E) = New York; and Am(S) = South Carolina. For the s...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Computer Speech & Language

دوره 24  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2010