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EN
The English central mid lax vowel (i.e., schwa) often contributes considerably to the sound differences between native and non-native speech. Many foreign speakers of English fail to reduce certain underlying vowels to schwa, which, on the suprasegmental level of description, affects the perceived rhythm of their speech. However, the problem of capturing quantitatively the differences between native and non-native schwa poses difficulties that, to this day, have been tackled only partially. We offer a technique of measurement in the acoustic domain that has not been probed properly as yet: the distribution of acoustic energy in the vowel spectrum. Our results show that spectral slope features measured in weak vowels discriminate between Czech and British speakers of English quite reliably. Moreover, the measurements of formant bandwidths turned out to be useful for the same task, albeit less direct
EN
The English central mid lax vowel (i.e., schwa) often contributes considerably to the sound differences between native and non-native speech. Many foreign speakers of English fail to reduce certain underlying vowels to schwa, which, on the suprasegmental level of description, affects the perceived rhythm of their speech. However, the problem of capturing quantitatively the differences between native and non-native schwa poses difficulties that, to this day, have been tackled only partially. We offer a technique of measurement in the acoustic domain that has not been probed properly as yet: the distribution of acoustic energy in the vowel spectrum. Our results show that spectral slope features measured in weak vowels discriminate between Czech and British speakers of English quite reliably. Moreover, the measurements of formant bandwidths turned out to be useful for the same task, albeit less direct.
EN
The expansion of telecommunication increased the availability of speech recordings which can be used in criminal investigations. Forensic science is a multidisciplinary approach that provides scientific grounds for assessing the evidence in such investigations. Forensic phonetics explores segmental (vocalic, consonantal) and suprasegmental (prosodic) speech parameters that are discriminant among speakers. There is, however, a gap between technical data‑driven and linguistically informed approaches, which we attempt to bridge in this study by examining Czech vowels through rigorous computational means. Seven different methods of quantifying vocalic spectral slope were compared for the purposes of speaker identification. In forensics, the use of spectral slope is mainly limited to the long‑term average spectra, which are easy to obtain, but have some serious drawbacks. Therefore, in this study, short‑term spectra of Czech vowels were used: although their extraction is more laborious, they provide more speaker‑specific information. Of the seven methods tested, two software predefined functions performed unsatisfactorily, while a combination of modified band density difference and band density ratio was able to differentiate among all of our speakers. The effect of vowel quality on these measures was also investigated.
CS
Vzestup telekomunikačních technologií v současné době umožňuje častější využití řečových nahrávek při vyšetřování trestných činů. Forenzní věda je multidisciplinární obor, který poskytuje vědeckou bázi pro posuzování důkazního materiálu během těchto vyšetřování. Forenzní fonetika se zabývá segmentálními (vokalickými a konsonantickými) a suprasegmentálními (prozodickými) řečovými rysy, které mohou odlišovat jednotlivé mluvčí. V tomto ohledu se nicméně rozšiřuje propast mezi technicky a lingvisticky orientovanými přístupy — tato studie je pokusem o její překlenutí zkoumáním českých vokálů rigorózními komputačními přístupy: pro účely rozpoznávání mluvčího ve forenzní praxi je zde porovnáno sedm metod stanovení vokalického spektrálního sklonu. Ve forenzní fonetice byl dosud spektrální sklon používán zejména při měření dlouhodobých průměrných spekter. Tato spektra se snadno získávají, avšak vykazují několik podstatných omezení. Zde jsou tedy využita krátkodobá spektra českých krátkých vokálů, jež přinášejí větší množství charakteristik specifických pro mluvčího, ale jejich extrakce je pracnější. Ze sedmi testovaných metod se softwarem předdefinované funkce ukázaly jako nevyhovující, zatímco kombinace modifikovaného rozdílu hustot pásem a poměru hustot pásem od sebe dokázala odlišit všechny mluvčí. Dále byl také prozkoumán vliv kvality vokálů na výsledky jednotlivých měření.
EN
Due to the clear interference of their mother tongue prosody, many Czech learners produce their English with a conspicuous foreign accent. The goal of the present study is to investigate the acoustic cues that differentiate stressed and unstressed syllabic nuclei and identify individual details concerning their contribution to the specific sound of Czech English. Speech production of sixteen female non-professional Czech and British speakers was analysed with the sounds segmented on a word and phone level and with both canonical and actual stress positions manually marked. Prior to analyses the strength of the foreign accent was assessed in a perception test. Subsequently, stressed and unstressed vowels were measured with respect to their duration, amplitude, fundamental frequency and spectral slope. Our results show that, in general, Czech speakers use much less acoustic marking of stress than the British subjects. The difference is most prominent in the domains of fundamental frequency and amplitude. The Czech speakers also deviate from the canonical placement of stress, shifting it frequently to the first syllable. On the other hand, they seem to approximate the needed durational difference quite successfully. These outcomes support the concept of language interference since they correspond with the existing linguistic knowledge about Czech and English word stress. The study adds specific details concerning the extent of this interference in four acoustic dimensions.
EN
Due to the clear interference of their mother tongue prosody, many Czech learners produce their English with a conspicuous foreign accent. The goal of the present study is to investigate the acoustic cues that differentiate stressed and unstressed syllabic nuclei and identify individual details concerning their contribution to the specific sound of Czech English. Speech production of sixteen female non-professional Czech and British speakers was analysed with the sounds segmented on a word and phone level and with both canonical and actual stress positions manually marked. Prior to analyses the strength of the foreign accent was assessed in a perception test. Subsequently, stressed and unstressed vowels were measured with respect to their duration, amplitude, fundamental frequency and spectral slope. Our results show that, in general, Czech speakers use much less acoustic marking of stress than the British subjects. The difference is most prominent in the domains of fundamental frequency and amplitude. The Czech speakers also deviate from the canonical placement of stress, shifting it frequently to the first syllable. On the other hand, they seem to approximate the needed durational difference quite successfully. These outcomes support the concept of language interference since they correspond with the existing linguistic knowledge about Czech and English word stress. The study adds specific details concerning the extent of this interference in four acoustic dimensions.
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