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Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps

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Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps. / Leemann, Adrian; Kolly, Marie-José ; Britain, David et al.
In: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol. 137, No. 4, 2304, 2015.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Leemann, A, Kolly, M-J, Britain, D, Purves, R & Glaser, E 2015, 'Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps', Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 137, no. 4, 2304. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4920412

APA

Leemann, A., Kolly, M.-J., Britain, D., Purves, R., & Glaser, E. (2015). Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 137(4), Article 2304. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4920412

Vancouver

Leemann A, Kolly MJ, Britain D, Purves R, Glaser E. Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2015;137(4):2304. Epub 2015 Apr 27. doi: 10.1121/1.4920412

Author

Leemann, Adrian ; Kolly, Marie-José ; Britain, David et al. / Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps. In: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 2015 ; Vol. 137, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{d52b8348291e46f6af9a91bc778ddf6c,
title = "Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps",
abstract = "Crowdsourcing linguistic phenomena with smartphone applications is relatively new. Apps have been used to train acoustic models for automatic speech recognition (de Vries et al. 2014) and to archive endangered languages (Iwaidja Inyaman Team 2012). Leemann and Kolly (2013) developed a free app for iOS—Dial{\"a}kt {\"A}pp (D{\"A}) (>78k downloads)—to document language change in Swiss German. Here, we present results of sound change based on D{\"A} data. D{\"A} predicts the users{\textquoteright} dialects: for 16 variables, users select their dialectal variant. D{\"A} then tells users which dialect they speak. Underlying this prediction are maps from the Linguistic Atlas of German-speaking Switzerland (SDS, 1962-2003), which documents the linguistic situation around 1950. If predicted wrongly, users indicate their actual dialect. With this information, the 16 variables can be assessed for language change. Results revealed robustness of phonetic variables; lexical and morphological variables were more prone to change. Phonetic variables like to lift (variants: /lupfə, lʏpfə, lipfə/) revealed SDS agreement scores of nearly 85%, i.e., little sound change. Not all phonetic variables are equally robust: ladle (variants: /x{\ae}lə, x{\ae}llə, x{\ae}uə, x{\ae}ɫə, x{\ae}ɫɫə/) exhibited significant sound change. We will illustrate the results using maps that show details of the sound changes at hand.",
author = "Adrian Leemann and Marie-Jos{\'e} Kolly and David Britain and Ross Purves and Elvira Glaser",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1121/1.4920412",
language = "English",
volume = "137",
journal = "Journal of the Acoustical Society of America",
issn = "0001-4966",
publisher = "Acoustical Society of America",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Documenting Sound Change with Smartphone Apps

AU - Leemann, Adrian

AU - Kolly, Marie-José

AU - Britain, David

AU - Purves, Ross

AU - Glaser, Elvira

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Crowdsourcing linguistic phenomena with smartphone applications is relatively new. Apps have been used to train acoustic models for automatic speech recognition (de Vries et al. 2014) and to archive endangered languages (Iwaidja Inyaman Team 2012). Leemann and Kolly (2013) developed a free app for iOS—Dialäkt Äpp (DÄ) (>78k downloads)—to document language change in Swiss German. Here, we present results of sound change based on DÄ data. DÄ predicts the users’ dialects: for 16 variables, users select their dialectal variant. DÄ then tells users which dialect they speak. Underlying this prediction are maps from the Linguistic Atlas of German-speaking Switzerland (SDS, 1962-2003), which documents the linguistic situation around 1950. If predicted wrongly, users indicate their actual dialect. With this information, the 16 variables can be assessed for language change. Results revealed robustness of phonetic variables; lexical and morphological variables were more prone to change. Phonetic variables like to lift (variants: /lupfə, lʏpfə, lipfə/) revealed SDS agreement scores of nearly 85%, i.e., little sound change. Not all phonetic variables are equally robust: ladle (variants: /xælə, xællə, xæuə, xæɫə, xæɫɫə/) exhibited significant sound change. We will illustrate the results using maps that show details of the sound changes at hand.

AB - Crowdsourcing linguistic phenomena with smartphone applications is relatively new. Apps have been used to train acoustic models for automatic speech recognition (de Vries et al. 2014) and to archive endangered languages (Iwaidja Inyaman Team 2012). Leemann and Kolly (2013) developed a free app for iOS—Dialäkt Äpp (DÄ) (>78k downloads)—to document language change in Swiss German. Here, we present results of sound change based on DÄ data. DÄ predicts the users’ dialects: for 16 variables, users select their dialectal variant. DÄ then tells users which dialect they speak. Underlying this prediction are maps from the Linguistic Atlas of German-speaking Switzerland (SDS, 1962-2003), which documents the linguistic situation around 1950. If predicted wrongly, users indicate their actual dialect. With this information, the 16 variables can be assessed for language change. Results revealed robustness of phonetic variables; lexical and morphological variables were more prone to change. Phonetic variables like to lift (variants: /lupfə, lʏpfə, lipfə/) revealed SDS agreement scores of nearly 85%, i.e., little sound change. Not all phonetic variables are equally robust: ladle (variants: /xælə, xællə, xæuə, xæɫə, xæɫɫə/) exhibited significant sound change. We will illustrate the results using maps that show details of the sound changes at hand.

U2 - 10.1121/1.4920412

DO - 10.1121/1.4920412

M3 - Journal article

VL - 137

JO - Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

JF - Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

SN - 0001-4966

IS - 4

M1 - 2304

ER -