Category: scaling perception

Talk at Speech Prosody 7: Segmental Influences on the Perception of Pitch Accent Scaling in English

Jonathan Barnes, Alejna Brugos, Nanette Veilleux & Stefanie Shattuck Hufnagel. (2014) “Segmental Influences on the Perception of Pitch Accent Scaling in English.” In Proceedings of Speech Prosody 7, Campbell, Gibbon, and Hirst (eds.), pp. 1125-1129. Full paper: [pdf (4.8 mb)] Abstract: In both tone and intonation systems, segmental context is known to influence production and […]

Poster at ASA: Individual differences in the perception of fundamental frequency scaling in American English speech

Nanette Veilleux, Jonathan Barnes, Alejna Brugos, & Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. (2014) “Individual differences in the perception of fundamental frequency scaling in American English speech.” Poster presented at the 167th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, Providence, May, 2014. Abstract: Although most participants (N = 62) in an F0 scaling experiment judged open syllables (day) as […]

Modelling the perception of English F0 scaling in a segmental context

Paper presented at ETAP 2 in Montreal: Barnes, Jonathan, Alejna Brugos, Nanette Veilleux, & Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. 2011. Modelling the perception of English F0 scaling in a segmental context. Experimental and Theoretical Advances in Prosody 2, Montreal, Canada. [pdf of abstract]

Voiceless intervals and perceptual completion in F0 contours: Evidence from scaling perception in American English

Paper from the special session at ICPhS XVII, “Shapes and Tones – Towards a More Holistic Perspective in Intonation Research”: Jonathan Barnes, Alejna Brugos, Nanette Veilleux & Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel. (2011). Voiceless Intervals and Perceptual Completion in F0 Contours: Evidence from Scaling Perception in American English. ICPhS 17, Hong Kong. [pdf] Abstract: Intonation models describing F0 […]