Representing Intonational Variation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Representing Intonational Variation

Description:

No commonly agreed upon model for one language, let alone all. Researchers work in different traditions and focus on different aspects of intonation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: juliahir
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Representing Intonational Variation


1
Representing Intonational Variation
  • Julia Hirschberg
  • CS 4706

2
Today
  • How can we represent meaningful speech variation
    s.t. we can communicate this to others?
  • Expanded vs. compressed pitch range?
  • Louder vs. softer speech?
  • Faster vs. slower speech?
  • Differences in intonational prominence?
  • Differences in intonational phrasing?
  • Differences in pitch contours?

3
Schemes for Representing Intonational Variation
  • An early proposal Joshua Steele
  • Language Learning Approaches
  • / IS it INteresting /
  • / dyou feel ANGry? /
  • / WHATS the PROBlem? / (McCarthy, 1991106)
  • How can we capture all and only the meaningful
    intonational variation for a given language
    unambiguously?

4
Intonation Models
  • No commonly agreed upon model for one language,
    let alone all
  • Researchers work in different traditions and
    focus on different aspects of intonation
  • Different models may arise from different types
    of data
  • Auditory
  • Acoustic
  • Perceptual

5
Intonation Models
  • Auditory
  • ESL-orientated empirical data scarce even
    trained listeners do not always agree on what
    they hear
  • Acoustic
  • Distinction between linguistically relevant and
    irrelevant details in acoustic signal
  • Perceptual approach
  • Experimental data, often w/ manipulated f0
  • Hard to design experiments with naïve listeners
    which give adequate control over parameters used
    in making decisions

6
Intonation models
  • Basic division into linear and superpositional
    models
  • Linear models intonation involves a succession
    of individual choices from an intonation lexicon
  • Superpositional models the intonation of an
    utterance involves a combination of local and
    utterance-sized components
  • Speakers may combine aspects of linear and
    superpositional models in the production of
    intonation

7
Intonation Models
  • Linear or Tone sequence models
  • British school (Kingdon 58, OConnor Arnold
    73, Cruttenden 97) based on auditory analysis
  • American School (Pierrehumbert 80, ToBI)
    mainly acoustic analysis
  • Dutch school (t Hart, Collier and Cohen 1990)
    perceptual data
  • Superpositional models (Fujisaki 1983, Möbius et
    al. 1993) acoustic/physiological

8
Superpositional models
  • Pitch pattern of intonation modeled with two
    components phrase component and accent
    component.
  • Phrase has basic shape, and pitch movements for
    individual accents are superimposed over basic
    shape

plus

Apples, oranges and tomatoes
9
Good for modeling declination
  • Declination downtrend in f0 over the course of
    an utterance
  • Best seen as statistical abstraction if one
    takes f0 measurements from enough utterances,
    over time, a downtrend in f0 will emerge

Lily and Rosa thought this was divine. Prince
William was gorgeous and he was looking for a
bride. They dreamed of wedding bells.
10
Superpositional models
  • Advantages
  • Good at modeling declination in intonation
    languages
  • Successful in speech synthesis for languages like
    Japanese (little variation in accent type, e.g.)
  • Capture prosodic structure in languages which
    have both tone and intonation (e.g. Mandarin)
  • Disadvantages
  • All contours must be modeled with an accent and a
    phrase component
  • Many SAE contours cannot be captured easily

11
  • Intonation contours cannot be modeled as
    sequences of prosodic events
  • No account of different accent types, or
    variations in phrase endings
  • No notation system which allows users to share
    observations from large speech corpora or to
    compare contours
  • A method primarily for synthesis, analysis of
    speech production

12
Tone sequence models
  • General assumption intonation is generated from
    sequences of (possibly) categorically different
    and phonologically distinctive accents
  • Two types of models within the group of tone
    sequence models
  • Type 1 Intonation made up of sequences of pitch
    movements
  • Type 2 Intonation made up of sequences of pitch
    levels or targets

13
Two types of tone-sequence model

Type 1 based on pitch movements
Type 2 based on pitch levels
H
The British School The Dutch School
L
The American School
14
Tone Sequence Models
  • Overall shape of intonation phrase is not
    component of models
  • Model is a succession of independent accent and
    boundary tone choices from an intonation lexicon
  • Do not model phrase-level phenomena (e.g.
    declination, pitch range, nuclear accent)

15
The British School
  • Tone sequence model and pitch movement analysis
    (e.g. falling vs. rising intonation)
  • Auditory model teaching English as a second
    language
  • OConnor and Arnold 1972
  • Earliest textbook for English instruction that
    tells user which contour appropriate in which
    context
  • No empirical evidence
  • British school analyses applied to English,
    German, Dutch, French,

16
Concepts in the British School
  • Basic unit of intonational description
    intonation phrase (tone unit)
  • Delimited by pauses, phrase-final lengthening,
    pitch movement
  • Syllables within a tone unit can be stressed or
    accented
  • telephone
  • Accented syllables are stressed and pitch
    prominent

17
Accent
  • Stressed syllable has full vowel and is perceived
    as involving a rhythmic beat
  • Pitch prominence
  • syllable produced with moving pitch or
  • syllable part of a pitch jump from a preceding
    syllable or onto a following syllable or
  • syllable at a point in the utterance where the
    direction of pitch movement changes (e.g. from
    rising to falling)

18
Pitch Prominence
  • Syllable produced with moving pitch
  • Syllable part of a pitch jump from a preceding
    syllable or onto a following syllable
  • Syllable at a point in utterance where direction
    of pitch movement changes

i
g
r
the
l
g
i
r
l
in the gar
the
den
n
e
d
r
a
g
e
h
t
n
i
l
r
i
g
the
19
An example
and I think its HOrriblerrible
...a POINT where
you have to CLEAN it
Theres a point where you have to clean it and I
think its horrible...
20
Intonation Phrase Structure
  • Intonational phrases have an internal structure
  • Structure determined by location of accents in an
    IP
  • Each accent defines the beginning of a prosodic
    constituent

21
Intonation phrase structure
  • Two types of accent unit in the British School
  • Prenuclear accent units also called the Head
  • Nuclear accent units also called the Nucleus
  • The nuclear accent unit is the last accent unit
    in the IP
  • The head comprises all prenuclear accent units

22
Intonation phrase structure
Head
Nucleus
JOHNs never BEEN to Jamaica
But
23
Six nuclear choices in English
24
Strengths and Weaknesses
  • How are accents, prominence defined? How are
    they related to segments? Too many options.
  • Are prenuclear accents qualitatively different
    from nuclear accents? What is the evidence?
  • Does each pitch accent begin a new prosodic
    unit in the phrase? What is the evidence?

25
Next Class
  • The American School and Laboratory Phonology
  • ToBI
  • Read the ToBI conventions
  • Listen to the ToBI training data or cardinal
    examples
  • Bring your laptop and headphones to class
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com