Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin

We describe models of Mandarin prosody that allow us to make quantitative measurements of prosodic strengths. These models use Stem-ML, which is a phenomenological model of the muscle dynamics and planning process that controls the tension of the vocal folds, and therefore the pitch of speech. Becau...

Volledige beschrijving

Bibliografische gegevens
Hoofdauteurs: Kochanski, G, Shih, C, Jing, H
Andere auteurs: European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP)
Formaat: Journal article
Taal:English
Gepubliceerd in: Elsevier 2003
Onderwerpen:
_version_ 1826288019169083392
author Kochanski, G
Shih, C
Jing, H
author2 European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP)
author_facet European Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP)
Kochanski, G
Shih, C
Jing, H
author_sort Kochanski, G
collection OXFORD
description We describe models of Mandarin prosody that allow us to make quantitative measurements of prosodic strengths. These models use Stem-ML, which is a phenomenological model of the muscle dynamics and planning process that controls the tension of the vocal folds, and therefore the pitch of speech. Because Stem-ML describes the interactions between nearby tones, we were able to capture surface tonal variations using a highly constrained model with only one template for each lexical tone category, and a single prosodic strength per word. The model accurately reproduces the intonation of the speaker, capturing 87% of the variance of f0 with these strength parameters. The result reveals alternating metrical patterns in words, and shows that the speaker marks a hierarchy of boundaries by controlling the prosodic strength of words. The strengths we obtain are also correlated with syllable duration, mutual information and part-of-speech.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T02:07:24Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:9f72e144-ab3b-4fe2-af3d-a3d233472728
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T02:07:24Z
publishDate 2003
publisher Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:9f72e144-ab3b-4fe2-af3d-a3d2334727282022-03-27T00:57:57ZQuantitative measurement of prosodic strength in MandarinJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9f72e144-ab3b-4fe2-af3d-a3d233472728LinguisticsEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetElsevier2003Kochanski, GShih, CJing, HEuropean Association for Signal Processing (EURASIP)International Speech Communication AssociationWe describe models of Mandarin prosody that allow us to make quantitative measurements of prosodic strengths. These models use Stem-ML, which is a phenomenological model of the muscle dynamics and planning process that controls the tension of the vocal folds, and therefore the pitch of speech. Because Stem-ML describes the interactions between nearby tones, we were able to capture surface tonal variations using a highly constrained model with only one template for each lexical tone category, and a single prosodic strength per word. The model accurately reproduces the intonation of the speaker, capturing 87% of the variance of f0 with these strength parameters. The result reveals alternating metrical patterns in words, and shows that the speaker marks a hierarchy of boundaries by controlling the prosodic strength of words. The strengths we obtain are also correlated with syllable duration, mutual information and part-of-speech.
spellingShingle Linguistics
Kochanski, G
Shih, C
Jing, H
Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title_full Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title_fullStr Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title_short Quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in Mandarin
title_sort quantitative measurement of prosodic strength in mandarin
topic Linguistics
work_keys_str_mv AT kochanskig quantitativemeasurementofprosodicstrengthinmandarin
AT shihc quantitativemeasurementofprosodicstrengthinmandarin
AT jingh quantitativemeasurementofprosodicstrengthinmandarin