F0 correlates of stress in Thai

An experiment was conducted to investigate changes in the fundamental frequency (F0) contours of Thai tones in connected speech as a function of stress. Thai has five tones: mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Stimuli consisted of 25 pairs of ambiguous target sentences with disambiguating context,...

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Main Authors: Potisuk, Siripong, Gandour, Jackson T., Harper, Mary P.
Other Authors: Purdue University
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179299
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1792992024-07-26T01:42:52Z F0 correlates of stress in Thai Potisuk, Siripong Gandour, Jackson T. Harper, Mary P. Purdue University Arts and Humanities An experiment was conducted to investigate changes in the fundamental frequency (F0) contours of Thai tones in connected speech as a function of stress. Thai has five tones: mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Stimuli consisted of 25 pairs of ambiguous target sentences with disambiguating context, produced at a conversational speaking rate. One member of each pair contained a 2-syllable noun-verb sequence exhibiting a - -stress pattern, the other member a 2-syllable noun compound exhibiting a - stress pattern. Acoustic analysis revealed that Fo contours of stressed syllables more closely approximate Fo contours in citation forms than those of unstressed syllables. The degree of approximation is primarily determined by syllable structure and the interaction between adjacent tones. In contrast, FO contours of unstressed syllables undergo a more complex process. The average height of all five tones can be classified into three tonal registers: low, mid, and high. The low register comprises the low and the rising tones, the mid register the mid tone, and the high register the falling and the high tones. Based on shape, the falling and high tones are distinguished within the high register, the low and rising tones within the low register. Therefore, a five-way contrast among all five tones appears to be maintained in both stressed and unstressed syllables. In addition, two statistical parameters, average Fo and coefficient of variation, are proposed for a machine model to automatically detect stressed and unstressed syllables. Published version 2024-07-26T01:42:52Z 2024-07-26T01:42:52Z 1994 Journal Article Potisuk, S., Gandour, J. T. & Harper, M. P. (1994). F0 correlates of stress in Thai. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 17(2), 1-27. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LTBA.17.2.01 0731-3500 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179299 10.32655/LTBA.17.2.01 2 17 1 27 en Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area © 1994 The Editor(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Potisuk, Siripong
Gandour, Jackson T.
Harper, Mary P.
F0 correlates of stress in Thai
description An experiment was conducted to investigate changes in the fundamental frequency (F0) contours of Thai tones in connected speech as a function of stress. Thai has five tones: mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Stimuli consisted of 25 pairs of ambiguous target sentences with disambiguating context, produced at a conversational speaking rate. One member of each pair contained a 2-syllable noun-verb sequence exhibiting a - -stress pattern, the other member a 2-syllable noun compound exhibiting a - stress pattern. Acoustic analysis revealed that Fo contours of stressed syllables more closely approximate Fo contours in citation forms than those of unstressed syllables. The degree of approximation is primarily determined by syllable structure and the interaction between adjacent tones. In contrast, FO contours of unstressed syllables undergo a more complex process. The average height of all five tones can be classified into three tonal registers: low, mid, and high. The low register comprises the low and the rising tones, the mid register the mid tone, and the high register the falling and the high tones. Based on shape, the falling and high tones are distinguished within the high register, the low and rising tones within the low register. Therefore, a five-way contrast among all five tones appears to be maintained in both stressed and unstressed syllables. In addition, two statistical parameters, average Fo and coefficient of variation, are proposed for a machine model to automatically detect stressed and unstressed syllables.
author2 Purdue University
author_facet Purdue University
Potisuk, Siripong
Gandour, Jackson T.
Harper, Mary P.
format Article
author Potisuk, Siripong
Gandour, Jackson T.
Harper, Mary P.
author_sort Potisuk, Siripong
title F0 correlates of stress in Thai
title_short F0 correlates of stress in Thai
title_full F0 correlates of stress in Thai
title_fullStr F0 correlates of stress in Thai
title_full_unstemmed F0 correlates of stress in Thai
title_sort f0 correlates of stress in thai
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179299
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