About
The Cornell Phonetics Lab is a group of students and faculty who are curious about speech. We study patterns in speech — in both movement and sound. We do a variety research — experiments, fieldwork, and corpus studies. We test theories and build models of the mechanisms that create patterns. Learn more about our Research. See below for information on our events and our facilities.
7th April 2022 04:30 PM
Dr. Kathryn Franich to give talk on Temporal Coordination and Phonetics Enhancement Effects
Dr. Kathryn Franich - Assistant Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science at the University of Delaware - will give at talk titled:
Exploring the Relationship Between Temporal Coordination and Phonetic Enhancement effects.
Abstract:
Stressed syllables in languages which have them tend to show two interesting properties: they show patterns of phonetic enhancement in articulation and acoustics and they also show coordinative properties: they typically play a key role in the alignment of speech with co-speech gesture in coordination of
speech with a musical beat and in other sensorimotor synchronization tasks such as speech- coordinated beat tapping
In this talk, I explore the notion of prosodic prominence from these two angles through an investigation of temporal-coordinative patterns and acoustic enhancement in two languages with vastly different prosodic structures: a US dialect of English, and the Bangoulap dialect of Medʉmba, a tonal Grassfields Bantu language spoken in Cameroon.
I illustrate how metrical prominence asymmetries can be observed through similar temporal-coordinative patterns in speech and co-speech gesture in both languages, despite differences in acoustically-measurable
patterns of phonetic enhancement.
I then provide evidence that enhancement effects, rather than being
orthogonal to temporal coordination, can be driven by coordination patterns themselves, and sketch an account of how certain cross-linguistic variation in phonetic enhancement effects may arise.
The Cornell Phonetics Laboratory (CPL) provides an integrated environment for the experimental study of speech and language, including its production, perception, and acquisition.
Located in Morrill Hall, the laboratory consists of six adjacent rooms and covers about 1,600 square feet. Its facilities include a variety of hardware and software for analyzing and editing speech, for running experiments, for synthesizing speech, and for developing and testing phonetic, phonological, and psycholinguistic models.
Web-Based Phonetics and Phonology Experiments with LabVanced
The Phonetics Lab licenses the LabVanced software for designing and conducting web-based experiments.
Labvanced has particular value for phonetics and phonology experiments because of its:
Students and Faculty are currently using LabVanced to design web experiments involving eye-tracking, audio recording, and perception studies.
Subjects are recruited via several online systems:
Computing Resources
The Phonetics Lab maintains two Linux servers that are located in the Rhodes Hall server farm:
In addition to the Phonetics Lab servers, students can request access to additional computing resources of the Computational Linguistics lab:
These servers, in turn, are nodes in the G2 Computing Cluster, which currently consists of 195 servers (82 CPU-only servers and 113 GPU servers) consisting of ~7400 CPU cores and 698 GPUs.
The G2 Cluster uses the SLURM Workload Manager for submitting batch jobs that can run on any available server or GPU on any cluster node.
Articulate Instruments - Micro Speech Research Ultrasound System
We use this Articulate Instruments Micro Speech Research Ultrasound System to investigate how fine-grained variation in speech articulation connects to phonological structure.
The ultrasound system is portable and non-invasive, making it ideal for collecting articulatory data in the field.
BIOPAC MP-160 System
The Sound Booth Laboratory has a BIOPAC MP-160 system for physiological data collection. This system supports two BIOPAC Respiratory Effort Transducers and their associated interface modules.
Language Corpora
Speech Aerodynamics
Studies of the aerodynamics of speech production are conducted with our Glottal Enterprises oral and nasal airflow and pressure transducers.
Electroglottography
We use a Glottal Enterprises EG-2 electroglottograph for noninvasive measurement of vocal fold vibration.
Real-time vocal tract MRI
Our lab is part of the Cornell Speech Imaging Group (SIG), a cross-disciplinary team of researchers using real-time magnetic resonance imaging to study the dynamics of speech articulation.
Articulatory movement tracking
We use the Northern Digital Inc. Wave motion-capture system to study speech articulatory patterns and motor control.
Sound Booth
Our isolated sound recording booth serves a range of purposes--from basic recording to perceptual, psycholinguistic, and ultrasonic experimentation.
We also have the necessary software and audio interfaces to perform low latency real-time auditory feedback experiments via MATLAB and Audapter.