Front cover image for Intonation : analysis, modelling and technology

Intonation : analysis, modelling and technology

ANTONIS BOTINIS 1. 1 Background This introduction provides essential information about the structure and the objects of study of this volume. Following the introduction, fourteen papers which represent current research on intonation are organised into five thematic sections: (I) Overview of Intonation, (II) Prominence and Focus, (III) Boundaries and Discourse, (IV) Intonation Modelling, and (V) Intonation Technology. Within the sections the papers are arranged thematically, although several papers which deal with various aspects of intonation and prosody are basically intersectional. As the title indicates, "Intonation: Analysis, Modelling and Technology" is a contribution to the study of prosody, with major emphasis on intonation. Intonation and tonal themes are thus the central object of the volume, although temporal and dynamic aspects are also taken into consideration by a good number of papers. Although tonal and prosodic distinctions have been dealt with throughout man's literate history with reference to the study of language, for example by classical philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle, it is in recent decades that we have witnessed the most fertile growth in intonation studies, as with experimental phonetics and speech technology in general. As Rossi (this volume) points out, intonation research really began to blossom in the sixties with a multi­ fold increase in prosodic studies, reflected in contributions to the International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS), and in the international literature
eBook, English, 2000
Springer Science+Business Media, B.V., Dordrecht, 2000
9780792367239, 9789401143172, 0792367235, 940114317X
1082292615
1 Introduction
Section I. Overview of Intonation
2 Intonation: Past, Present, Future
Section II. Prominence and Focus
3 Acoustic-phonetic Analysis of Prominence in Swedish
4 Prosodic Disambiguation in English and Italian
5 Contrastive Tonal Analysis of Focus Perception in Greek and Swedish
Section III. Boundaries and Discourse
6 Phonetic Correlates of Statement versus Question Intonation in Dutch
7 Pitch Movements and Information Structure in Spontaneous Dutch Discourse
8 Discourse Constraints on F0 Peak Timing in English
Section IV. Intonation Modelling
9 Automatic Stylisation and Modelling of French and Italian Intonation
10 A Phonological Model of French Intonation
11 A Declination Model of Mandarin Chinese
12 A Quantitative Model of F0 Generation and Alignment
Section V. Intonation Technology
13 Modelling of Swedish Text and Discourse Intonation in a Speech Synthesis Framework
14 A Prosodic Model for Text-to-speech Synthesis in French
15 Prosodic Parameters of French in a Speech Recognition System
Index of names