Return to: Experimental Phonetics
Topics
Annotation Pro – first steps.
Perception tests. Design & implementation.
Perception of speech vs. its acoustic and articulatory descriptions.
Rating scales: dimensions vs. categories.
Speech perception in children, the effects of early infancy exposure to foreign language stimuli.
Creating corpora for the needs of investigating speech perception in infants.
Exercises
Task 1. Opening a file in Annotation Pro and saving new annotations (.ANT).
Please download the .zip folder, unpack it to a folder on your hard disk, open each of the files in Annotation Pro (File ->Open), and save the respective annotation files in the same folder as the wave files, using the same file names.
Task 2. Importing annotation files from external formats.
Please use one of your annotation files created in Praat or Wavesurfer and import it to Annotation Pro and then save it as an .ANT file to the same location as the respective wave file.
Task 3. Workspace – file collection.
Add the .ANT files created in Task 1 and Task 2 to Workspace in Annotation Pro. Then save the workspace to your folder (it will be saved as an .ANTW file). Thanks to this you can easily use a collection of files in the programme without a need to open particular files separately. Workspace is also one of the important options useful when conducting perception tests in Annotation Pro.
—> A tip: see a screenshot where to find the workspace and import/export options here.
Task 4. Perception test options.
Please inspect the perception test settings in Tools->Options->Sessions (see here). Start the perception test mode (see also here) and try out a perception test using the .ANT files from the preceding tasks. What kind of graphical feature representation might be useful for this type of stimuli? see e.g., here.
Selected literature
Illustrations of the IPA: Polish
Early Speech Perception and Later Language Development: Implications for the “Critical Period”
Vocal expression of emotion, discrete-emotions and dimensional accounts
Acoustic Correlates of Emotion Dimensions in View of Speech Synthesis
Prosodic and Acoustic Features of Emotional Speech in Taiwan Mandarin