Jane Stuart-Smith - Speech and Society - Lecture 3
Third lecture of Jane Stuart-Smith on "Speech and Society" given as an invited professor by the ILPGA - Sorbonne Nouvelle / Paris 3 University
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Third lecture of Jane Stuart-Smith on "Speech and Society" given as an invited professor by the ILPGA - Sorbonne Nouvelle / Paris 3 University
Fourth lecture of Jane Stuart-Smith on "Speech and Society" given as an invited professor by the ILPGA - Sorbonne Nouvelle / Paris 3 University
Second lecture of Jane Stuart-Smith on "Speech and Society" given as an invited professor by the ILPGA - Sorbonne Nouvelle / Paris 3 University
First lecture of Jane Stuart-Smith on "Speech and Society" given as an invited professor by the ILPGA - Sorbonne Nouvelle / Paris 3 University
Over the last century, our understanding of variability in the speech signal has undergone a variety of changes. Once regarded as noise in the signal, it has now become a major topic of investigation
In this lecture, I will talk about respiration, a biological rhythm which is flexible and adaptable and crucially involved in speech production, perception and face-to-face interactions. Based on
While any theory of speech behavior must ultimately incorporate the human body, modeling bodies has not been a central program in language research. Thinking about the body in quite tangible terms was
While any theory of speech behavior must ultimately incorporate the human body, modeling bodies has not been a central program in language research. Thinking about the body in quite tangible terms was
While any theory of speech behavior must ultimately incorporate the human body, modeling bodies has not been a central program in language research. Thinking about the body in quite tangible terms was
While any theory of speech behavior must ultimately incorporate the human body, modeling bodies has not been a central program in language research. Thinking about the body in quite tangible terms was
Speech dynamics: Mapping phonetic surface to phonological forms in neurotypical and atypical speech (Doris Mücke) 2. Dealing with the complexity of prosodic systems
Speech dynamics: Mapping phonetic surface to phonological forms in neurotypical and atypical speech (Doris Mücke) 4. Modelling unpredictable patterns in speech production