History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish
This study focuses on voicing alternation in French and Spanish stops, i.e. canonically voiceless /ptk/ realized as voiced [bdg] or canonically voiced /bdg/ realized as voiceless [ptk]. Forced alignment with voicing variants was used to annotate large speech corpora in French and in Spanish. The fo...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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UPV/EHU Press
2025-01-01
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Series: | Anuario del Seminario de Filología Vasca "Julio de Urquijo" |
Online Access: | https://ojs.ehu.eus/index.php/ASJU/article/view/25987 |
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author | Yaru Wu Ioana Chitoran Ioana Vasilescu Martine Adda-Decker Lori Lamel |
author_facet | Yaru Wu Ioana Chitoran Ioana Vasilescu Martine Adda-Decker Lori Lamel |
author_sort | Yaru Wu |
collection | DOAJ |
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This study focuses on voicing alternation in French and Spanish stops, i.e. canonically voiceless /ptk/ realized as voiced [bdg] or canonically voiced /bdg/ realized as voiceless [ptk]. Forced alignment with voicing variants was used to annotate large speech corpora in French and in Spanish. The following factors of variation were examined: position in the word, preceding and following context, duration of the stop and that of surrounding phones, speech rate, part of speech, and the weight of these factors on voicing alternation. The voicing nature of the stops (whether the stop is phonologically voiceless /ptk/ or voiced /bdg/) turns out to be the factor that contributes the most to the prediction of voicing alternations among all investigated factors for Spanish, according to the random forest model. Whereas for French, the same factor comes after contextual and acoustic factors in the ranking. These results suggest that stop voicing patterns differently in these two Romance languages, although they both have a similar voiced-voiceless phonological contrast.
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format | Article |
id | doaj-art-7479fb6c28734b98adebcb58f4cbddf0 |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 0582-6152 2444-2992 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2025-01-01 |
publisher | UPV/EHU Press |
record_format | Article |
series | Anuario del Seminario de Filología Vasca "Julio de Urquijo" |
spelling | doaj-art-7479fb6c28734b98adebcb58f4cbddf02025-01-31T08:28:32ZengUPV/EHU PressAnuario del Seminario de Filología Vasca "Julio de Urquijo"0582-61522444-29922025-01-0157(1-2)10.1387/asju.25987History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish Yaru Wu0Ioana Chitoran1Ioana Vasilescu2Martine Adda-Decker3Lori Lamel4Université de Caen Normandie – CRISCO/EA4255, LISN, CNRS-Sorbonne NouvelleCLILLAC-ARP, Université Paris CitéLISN, Univ. Paris-SaclayLISN (Univ. Paris-Saclay), Laboratoire de Phonétique et Phonologie (CNRS-Sorbonne Nouvelle)LISN, Univ. Paris-Saclay This study focuses on voicing alternation in French and Spanish stops, i.e. canonically voiceless /ptk/ realized as voiced [bdg] or canonically voiced /bdg/ realized as voiceless [ptk]. Forced alignment with voicing variants was used to annotate large speech corpora in French and in Spanish. The following factors of variation were examined: position in the word, preceding and following context, duration of the stop and that of surrounding phones, speech rate, part of speech, and the weight of these factors on voicing alternation. The voicing nature of the stops (whether the stop is phonologically voiceless /ptk/ or voiced /bdg/) turns out to be the factor that contributes the most to the prediction of voicing alternations among all investigated factors for Spanish, according to the random forest model. Whereas for French, the same factor comes after contextual and acoustic factors in the ranking. These results suggest that stop voicing patterns differently in these two Romance languages, although they both have a similar voiced-voiceless phonological contrast. https://ojs.ehu.eus/index.php/ASJU/article/view/25987 |
spellingShingle | Yaru Wu Ioana Chitoran Ioana Vasilescu Martine Adda-Decker Lori Lamel History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish Anuario del Seminario de Filología Vasca "Julio de Urquijo" |
title | History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish |
title_full | History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish |
title_fullStr | History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish |
title_full_unstemmed | History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish |
title_short | History in the making: Voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large-scale corpora in French and Spanish |
title_sort | history in the making voicing alternation as stop lenition via an automatic analysis of large scale corpora in french and spanish |
url | https://ojs.ehu.eus/index.php/ASJU/article/view/25987 |
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