Title: Functional Timing of Prosody
1Functional Timing of Prosody
- Klaus J. Kohler
- IPDS, Kiel, Germany
Symposium on Prosodic Timing From Signal to
Function Centre for Languages and Literature,
Lund University 27 January, 2006
21. Timing
- 3 strands of dynamics, i.e. amplitude-time
courses in speech production - subglottal air flow generation
- long-term settings and dynamics
- vocal effort
- breath group organization
- locally superimposed short-term dynamics
- force accent
3- glottal phonation and f0
- long-term settings and dynamics
- voice quality
- individual
- group
- functional voice control attitudes, emotions
- pitch register, pitch range
- internal timing of global pitch patterns
4- locally superimposed short-term dynamics
- force accent
- tone (tone languages), tonal accent (e.g.
Swedish) - raising pitch for local accentuation
- segmental distinctions
- voiced/voiceless
- breathy (voice)
- creak
5- supraglottal vocal tract gestures
- short-term opening-closing/closing-opening
gestures - vocalic and consonantal segments
- syllables onset and rhyme
6- integrated into long-term settings and dynamics
- base of articulation
- overall speech rate
- individual characteristic
- group characteristic Mediterranan vs
Scandinavian - functional adaptation asides, time constraints
- rhythm grouping of syllables
- functional vocal tract control liprounding for
endearment, speaking with a smile
7- temporal coordination of the 3 strands
- pathological
- language and dialect differences
- functional adaptation
8Germ. Sie hat ja gelogen. Shes been lying.
l
où
9- amplitude interaction between the 3 strands
- increase of f0 and syllabic amplitude-time course
for pitch accent - increased level in all 3 strands for force accent
10Germ. (Wie Boris) Valerie die Treppe
runterkickt. (When Boris) kicks Valerie down
the stairs.
k
H
I
kH tlt
11- vocal tract dynamics are pimarily short-term
- locally timed strictures of opening and closing
- supplemented by short-term glottal adjustments
- leading to segmental structure
- for the linguistic function of word
identification - made alphabetic writing systems possible
- origin of the phoneme concept
- and of the concepts of target and coarticulation
12- glottal features play subsidiary role at this
level - consonantal distinctions
- mainly voiced/voiceless
- often coded by other timing means
- tone
- voice register
13- glottal dynamics are pimarily long-term for
pragmatic functions - they should thus be analysed as global patterns
- not, e.g., as linear sequences of H and L
- differentiation of
- short-term f0 patterns for word tones
- and long-term f0 patterns for pragmatics
- likewise subglottal dynamics are pimarily
long-term for pragmatic functions
142. Function
- linguistic function to differentiate intellectual
meaning - word phonology
- prosodic structure
- word stress increase, noun vs verb
- sentence accent, focus, emphasis for contrast or
for intensity Im not going to visit him. - sentence mode He hasnt done it, has he.
- syntagmatic phrasing He left her (,) a new man.
15- social function indices of speaker - hearer
relations - expressive function attitudes and emotions
- guide function assisting and influencing the
decoding of messages - rhythmic structure
- phonetic rhetoric (boring, interesting, cajoling)
16- pragmatic functions of peak contour
synchronizations - early finality established
- medial openness new observation
- late unexpectedness expressive evaluation
- late medial contrasting new observation
17Er war mal schlank. He used to be slim. -
medial - late medial - late
18- This gives us a semantic-pragmatic net of
- established
- new
- new with rational contrast to expectation
- new with contrast and expressive evaluation.
19- pragmatic function of force accent
- negative emphasis for intensity
- negative expressive evaluation
- disapproval
- It can be added to the semantic-pragmatic net.
203. Timing Function Relationship
- scale of synchronization of
- long-term f0 patterns
- with short-term vocal tract dynamics
- synchronization of subglottal, glottal and
supraglottal short-term timing strands in force
accents
21- on the other hand, semantic-pragmatic net of
functions - These synchronization patterns and functions may
be assumed to be universal. - Force accent and its negative expressiveness may
also be assumed to be universal.
22- How are the peak synchronizations and respective
functions linked in different dialects and
different languages? - Swedish
- Russian
- Alemannic dialects of German
23- intervention of additional features for the
coding of the same functions - peak height
- intensity
- segmental lengthening
- lexical elements, morphosyntax
244. Perception of Timing Patterns
- perceptual intonation categories
- determined by global characteristics
- f0 peak and valley synchronizations
- internal f0 contour timing
- intensity timing
- addition of local characteristics
- f0 increase on accented syllable
- accented syllable duration
25- The original f0-VT synchronization categories of
- early medial late medial late peaks
- and early late valleys
- receive a new perceptual categorization as
multifactorial timing categories.
26- There are indications
- that production and perception of the
multifactorial timing of intonation categories
are congruent - and that isolated parameter manipulation for
perception tests may create artefacts.
27- The production of short-term segmental aspects
and their perception may diverge - in perception longer-term parameters
(articulatory prosodies) play a more prominent
role - pronunciation for white please
- wAgtE_? pliz by a Londoner
- mistaken for bl³Agtk pliz by a Scottish
listener - expecting ãÃi? pliz
285. Developing a new research paradigm
- The goal of phonetics is the elucidation of
speech communication - of the relationship between phonetic substance
and communicative function - with linguistic form being derived from this
relationship.
29- Neither substance nor function can be analysed
without the other - measurement must take place within communicative
domains - go beyond lab speech
- take spontaneous speech into the lab
30- functional categories must be related to
substantive parameters in production and
perception - go beyond systemic linguistic contrasts
- include the whole spectrum of the behavioural
sound - meaning relationships - with reference to such central concepts as time
and function.
31- There is growing unease with Laboratory Phonology
theory and practice, e.g. with ToBI. - Yi Xu goes as far as giving priority to function
over lingistic form. - When we combine this with Björn Lindbloms
priority of substance over linguistic form, we
capture the future of phonetics.
32- This movement will gather momentum in years to
come - in the development of a comprehensive theory of
speech communication - and in the description of speech behaviour in the
languages of the world. - We will then have a new paradigm
33The Paradigm of
Function-Oriented
Experimental Phonetics
I hope you find it exciting!
So we can now take some time
for questions and other communicative functions.