Relative contribution of vowel quality and duration to native language identification in foreign-accented english

Automatic identification of a speaker’s native language background may have forensic applications. This paper explores the feasibility of automatic identification of the native language background of a foreign speaker of English, using phonetically interpretable measurements. The production of the ten monophthongs of (American) English by Dutch, Mandarin Chinese and American speakers was used as a test case. Vowel formants F1 (corresponding to articulatory vowel height), F2 (capturing vowel backness and lip rounding) and vowel duration were extracted. Clearly different duration and patterning... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Wang, Hongyan
van Heuven, Vincent J.
Dokumenttyp: contributionToPeriodical
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Verlag/Hrsg.: Association for Computing Machinery
Inc
Schlagwörter: American English / Automatic classification / Dutch / English as a foreign language / Foreign accent identification / Forensic application / Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) / Mandarin / Vowel duration / Vowels formants
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26634958
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://pure.knaw.nl/portal/en/publications/12a23799-6d53-45d3-98bb-5bdf67512850

Automatic identification of a speaker’s native language background may have forensic applications. This paper explores the feasibility of automatic identification of the native language background of a foreign speaker of English, using phonetically interpretable measurements. The production of the ten monophthongs of (American) English by Dutch, Mandarin Chinese and American speakers was used as a test case. Vowel formants F1 (corresponding to articulatory vowel height), F2 (capturing vowel backness and lip rounding) and vowel duration were extracted. Clearly different duration and patterning of the vowels in the vowel space were seen. Automatic classification of the speaker’s native language was 90 percent correct when all acoustic parameters were used as predictors. Language identification was slightly poorer when only formant data were used (85% correct) and substantially poorer – but much better than chance – when only vowel duration was used (60% correct). We conclude that vowel duration provides a weaker cue to foreign-accent identification in English than the spectral properties but that the combination of both information sources yields the best results. This study was sponsored by the Chinese Ministry of Education Humanities and Social Sciences Planning Project (14YJA740036) and Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee Basic Research Project (NCYJ 20140418091413526). The second author additionally acknowledges financial support under project TÁMOP 4.2.1.D-15/1KONV-2015-0006 “Development of the innovation centre in Kőszeg in the frame of the educational and research network at the University of Pannonia”, which is subsidized by the European Union and Hungary and co-financed by the European Social Fund.