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  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 6 - Carolina Lins Machado
    2023/01/08

    In Episode 6, my guest is Carolina Lins Machado!

    Carolina is a Research Assistant and PhD student in the SNSF project Untangling the relationship between voice and face: A cross-modal approach to talker identity, supervised by Dr. Lei He, Prof. Dr. Volker Dellwo and Dr. Willemijn Heeren. She completed a BA in Linguistik und Phonetik and Informationsverarbeitung (University of Cologne, DE), followed by an MA in Theoretical and Experimental Linguistics (Leiden University, NL).

    Her primary research interest is related to speaker-specific information in speech dynamics. The aim of her research is to investigate idiosyncratic behavior in the acoustic and articulatory domains.

    How did I meet Carolina? We are in the same Reading Group at university, she always gives us a lot of insight into phonetics and today I’m really happy to have her as my guest on the podcast. Carolina, thank you so much for being my guest for this episode on the PhonPod!

    You can read some of her work here: 

    • Idiosyncratic lingual articulation of American English /æ/ and /ɑ/ using network analysis


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    21 分
  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 5 - Valeriia Perepelytsia
    2022/10/27

    For Episode 5, I am honored to welcome the amazing Valeriia Perepelytsia!

    Valeriia is a PhD student in the SNSF project Dynamics of indexical information in speech and its role in speech communication and speaker recognition, supervised by Prof. Dr. Volker Dellwo, Prof. Dr. Martin Meyer and Dr. Natalie Giroud.  She has a bachelor’s degree in English philology from Kyiv National Linguistic University, Ukraine, and master’s degree in English linguistics from the University of Graz, Austria. She is interested in voice quality and voice dynamics, neurobiology of speech and language, and evolution of language. Her PhD project focuses on the role of neuronal oscillations in speech processing, namely, which role different acoustic cues play in the entrainment to speech of specific speakers.

    How do I know Valeriia? We are in the same Reading Group every semester, where we read journal articles and present them, and now I’m more than delighted to have her as my guest on the podcast. Valeriia, thank you so much for being my guest today and welcome to the podcast!

    Follow her:

    • on ResearchGate
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    26 分
  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 4 - Omnia Ibrahim
    2022/10/10

    My guest in Episode 4 is the spectacular Omnia Ibrahim

    Omnia is a PhD student in the Computational Linguistics Department, University of Zürich, Switzerland. Her PhD project focuses on Speech dynamics as a function of channel and listener variability. Since June 2020, she has been a Research Assistant in the SFB 1102 project in the Language Science and Technology Department at Saarland University, Germany, where she is looking at the interaction between information density and channel characteristics.

    How did I meet Omnia? I met Omnia in an face to face session in 2019 at the University of Zurich, where I was just a visitor and not yet a PhD student. Life happened that we also met later on in the same reading group where we still are together, and now I’m so so happy to have her as my guest on the podcast. 

    Omnia, thank you so much for being my guest!

    Read her first first-author article: 

    • Ibrahim, O., Yuen, I., van Os, M., Andreeva, B., & Möbius, B. (2022). The combined effects of contextual predictability and noise on the acoustic realisation of German syllables. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 152(2), 911–920. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0013413 

    Follow Omnia:

    • on ResearchGate
    • on Twitter 


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    26 分
  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 3 - Leah Bradshaw
    2022/09/20

    Get ready to listen to Leah, whom I also know personally and travels us in very interesting worlds in the realm of Linguistics!

    Leah Bradshaw is a PhD student in the SNSF project "Dynamics of indexical information in speech and its role in speech communication and speaker recognition”, supervised by Prof. Dr. Volker Dellwo, Prof. Dr. Lena Jäger and Dr. Eleanor Chodroff. She completed a BA in English Language and Linguistics (University of Sheffield, UK), followed by an MSc in Forensic Speech Science (University of York, UK). Broadly, her research interests are in forensic phonetics, prosodic features of speech and automatic speaker recognition. Her PhD project investigates the role of indexical acoustic properties to assist decision making in discriminating and identifying speakers, and the possibility of using different experimental techniques (namely, eye-tracking) to gain insights into this decision making process.

    You can follow Leah here:

    • On Twitter: @_leahkaye
    • On ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Leah-Bradshaw-2, where you can also read all of her articles. 

    Resources mentioned: 

    • Prof Dr Nadine Lavan's work
    • Prof Dr Eleanor Chodroff's work 


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    24 分
  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 2 - Rasmus Puggaard-Rode
    2022/07/27
    Hi everyone! Welcome to Episode 2 of the PhonPod Podcast.  My guest is an amazing linguist from Denmark and who is currently located in the Netherlands, Rasmus Puggaard-Rode.   Rasmus is a PhD candidate working on phonology, phonetics, and the space between them. He is currently based at Leiden University Centre for Linguistics. He has his MA Linguistics from Aarhus University. His dissertation, which he has recently handed in (good luck, Rasmus!), deals with the stop consonants of Danish. It is largely corpus-based. He uses a corpus of spontaneous spoken Danish to investigate intervocalic voicing and spectral characteristics of stop releases, and a large legacy corpus of dialect recordings to investigate regional variation in voice onset time, closure voicing, and characteristics of stop releases. We discuss many interesting things with Rasmus in this episode, and I have learned so many things from him.  The resources he mentions during the podcast are:  Resources:  Fischer-Jørgensen, Eli (1989). Annual Report of the Institute of Phonetics University of Copenhagen. https://tidsskrift.dk/ARIPUC/issue/archive Fischer-Jørgensen, Eli (1954). Acoustic Analysis of Stop Consonants. https://acrobat.adobe.com/link/review?uri=urn:aaid:scds:US:35530345-85c0-3e5a-94e3-c84db44eb093  The Danish dialect collection: https://dansklyd.statsbiblioteket.dk/samling/dialektsamlingen/ Thank you so much for everything, Rasmus!
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    21 分
  • The PhonPod Podcast - Episode 1 - Marc Jones
    2022/06/27
    Welcome to the PhonPod Podcast, a podcast about phonology, phonetics and so much more! In this very first episode, my guest is Marc Jones. Marc teaches English at Toyo University. He started teaching in private language schools in 2003 and has taught in several contexts. His interests include listening and phonology, Task-Based Language Teaching, teacher cognition, and duoethnography. He holds a Trinity DipTESOL, MA Applied Linguistics and TESOL and MRes Humanities and Social Science from University of Portsmouth. I first met Marc in a teaching community on Twitter, and we later on became coursemates on the MA Applied Linguistics and TESOL at the University of Portsmouth. Thank you so much, Marc!  Here is the list of books, articles and chapters that Marc mentions throughout the episode:  Books: Cutler, A. (2012). Native listening: Language experience and the recognition of spoken words. MIT Press. Field, J. (2008). Listening in the language classroom. Cambridge University Press. Jones, D. (2009). The phoneme: Its nature and use (3. ed., reissued, digitally printed version). Cambridge Univ. Press. Koffi, E. (2021). Relevant acoustic phonetics of L2 English: Focus on intelligibility. CRC Press. Articles/Chapters: Best, C. T., & Tyler, M. D. (2007). Nonnative and second-language speech perception: Commonalities and complementarities. In O.-S. Bohn & M. J. Munro (Eds.), Language Experience in Second Language Speech Learning: In honor of James Emil Flege (Vol. 17, pp. 13–34). John Benjamins Publishing Company. https://doi.org/10.1075/lllt.17.07bes Flege, J., & Bohn, O.-S. (2020). The revised Speech Learning Model. Flege, J. E. (1995). Second-language Speech Learning: Theory, Findings, and Problems. In W. Strange (Ed.), Speech Perception and Linguistic Experience. (pp. 229–273). York Press. Polka, L., & Bohn, O.-S. (2011). Natural Referent Vowel (NRV) framework: An emerging view of early phonetic development. Journal of Phonetics, 39(4), 467–478. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2010.08.007
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    30 分