Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation
View graph of relations

Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation. / Leemann, Adrian; Siebenhaar, Beat.
Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008. 2008. p. 289-292.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Leemann, A & Siebenhaar, B 2008, Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation. in Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008. pp. 289-292. <http://isle.illinois.edu/sprosig/sp2008/papers/id139.pdf>

APA

Leemann, A., & Siebenhaar, B. (2008). Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation. In Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008 (pp. 289-292) http://isle.illinois.edu/sprosig/sp2008/papers/id139.pdf

Vancouver

Leemann A, Siebenhaar B. Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation. In Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008. 2008. p. 289-292

Author

Leemann, Adrian ; Siebenhaar, Beat. / Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation. Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008. 2008. pp. 289-292

Bibtex

@inproceedings{de82369e4ba34abb87d14d1def0cdabe,
title = "Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation",
abstract = "The present paper discusses the intonational features of 3 Swiss German dialects: Valais Swiss German (WS), representing the Alpine variety, and Zurich (ZH) and Berne (BE) Swiss German, representing the Midland dialects. By application of the Fujisaki intonation model, 24 speakers ofthe mentioned dialects are investigated according to their global as well as local intonational features. The BE and WS show similar intonational features in 4 out of 9 observed variables. Yet the WS group seems to distinguish itself with a high pitch range; the BE, on the other hand, is especially characterized with a late pitch onset in local accents. The ZH speakers, in contrast, stand out in that they show distinct intonational features which are largely unparalleled in the other 2 dialects. The paper ends with an outlook of a practical extension to the Fujisaki model, the integration of a slow-rise component – a component introduced by Mixdorff in writing, yet never implemented into his Fujisaki parameter extraction program. ",
author = "Adrian Leemann and Beat Siebenhaar",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
pages = "289--292",
booktitle = "Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Swiss Alpine and Midland Intonation

AU - Leemann, Adrian

AU - Siebenhaar, Beat

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - The present paper discusses the intonational features of 3 Swiss German dialects: Valais Swiss German (WS), representing the Alpine variety, and Zurich (ZH) and Berne (BE) Swiss German, representing the Midland dialects. By application of the Fujisaki intonation model, 24 speakers ofthe mentioned dialects are investigated according to their global as well as local intonational features. The BE and WS show similar intonational features in 4 out of 9 observed variables. Yet the WS group seems to distinguish itself with a high pitch range; the BE, on the other hand, is especially characterized with a late pitch onset in local accents. The ZH speakers, in contrast, stand out in that they show distinct intonational features which are largely unparalleled in the other 2 dialects. The paper ends with an outlook of a practical extension to the Fujisaki model, the integration of a slow-rise component – a component introduced by Mixdorff in writing, yet never implemented into his Fujisaki parameter extraction program.

AB - The present paper discusses the intonational features of 3 Swiss German dialects: Valais Swiss German (WS), representing the Alpine variety, and Zurich (ZH) and Berne (BE) Swiss German, representing the Midland dialects. By application of the Fujisaki intonation model, 24 speakers ofthe mentioned dialects are investigated according to their global as well as local intonational features. The BE and WS show similar intonational features in 4 out of 9 observed variables. Yet the WS group seems to distinguish itself with a high pitch range; the BE, on the other hand, is especially characterized with a late pitch onset in local accents. The ZH speakers, in contrast, stand out in that they show distinct intonational features which are largely unparalleled in the other 2 dialects. The paper ends with an outlook of a practical extension to the Fujisaki model, the integration of a slow-rise component – a component introduced by Mixdorff in writing, yet never implemented into his Fujisaki parameter extraction program.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SP - 289

EP - 292

BT - Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008

ER -