Speech Science Forum -- Johanna Cronenberg
14 November 2024, 3:00 pm–4:00 pm
Dynamic Analysis of /ia/ in Naturalistic Portuguese
Event Information
Open to
- All
Availability
- Yes
Organiser
-
Victor Rosi
Location
-
Chandler House B012Wakefield StreetLondonWC1N 1PFUnited Kingdom
According to historical and phonological accounts, the vowel sequence /ia/ is produced as a sequence of two full vowels (i.e., hiatus) in Portuguese, while most Romance languages prefer to produce /ia/ as a semi-vowel /j/ followed by a full vowel /a/ (i.e., diphthong). This description is supported by data recorded in laboratory conditions, but there are good reasons to expect that the cross-Romance typology may break down in fluent, spontaneous speech which is subject to significant reduction processes. Using large corpora of radio and TV show recordings, we investigate whether /ia/ is indeed maintained as hiatus in naturalistic speech in Portuguese and whether the proximity of /ia/ to the stressed syllable influences its realization. For over 6800 tokens of /ia/, we measured F1, F2, and the duration of the vowel sequence, submitted the signals to Functional Principal Components Analysis, and ran LMERs on the resulting Principal Components scores. The main finding is that the acoustic realization of /ia/ in Portuguese ranges from hiatus-like formant configurations when the sequence is stressed to almost monophthongal realizations in post-tonic position. While the amount of variation is considerable and likely higher than in laboratory speech, a preliminary cross-linguistic analysis shows that Portuguese, nevertheless, seems to prefer hiatus-like over diphthongal productions of /ia/ in comparison to Italian, Spanish, and Romanian. We will discuss the findings with respect to the benefits and challenges of working with large corpora of naturalistic speech and of using a dynamic vs. a static analysis technique.
Zoom link : https://ucl.zoom.us/s/92052680901
About the Speaker
Johanna Cronenberg
Postdoctoral Researcher at Université Paris Cité
In 2023, Johanna was awarded her PhD in phonetics for her thesis titled "A Cognitive and Computational Model of the Sound Change from Pre- to Post-Aspiration in Andalusian Spanish", which was supervised by Prof. Jonathan Harrington at the Institute of Phonetics and Speech Processing in Munich. She is now a postdoc at the Université Paris Cité where she works with Prof. Ioana Chitoran on a project concerning vowel sequences in Romance languages. Her research interests include all facets of sound change as well as computational and statistical modelling techniques.