Fresco BookShop at TrueFresco Art Network

 Location:  Home» All Books » English (Specific Aspects) » Acoustics of American English Speech: A Dynamic Approach  
Categories
Selected Fresco Books
All Books
Fresco Books
Fresco Artists
-- Fra Angelico
-- Botticelli
-- Canaletto
-- Carracci
-- Cimabue
-- Correggio
-- Guercino
-- Gozzoli
-- Giotto
-- Giorgione
-- Klimt
-- Lippi
-- Lotto
-- Mantegna
-- Masaccio
-- Michelangelo
-- Orozco
-- Parmigianino
-- Perugino
-- Piero della Francesca
-- Diego Rivera
-- Rosso Fiorentino
-- Andrey Rublev
-- Raphael
-- Signorelli
-- Siqueiros
-- Tintoretto
-- Titian
-- Uccello
-- Veronese
-- Vasari
Mall Items
Apparel
Automotive
Baby
Beauty
Computers
DVD
Electronics
Food.
Grocery
Health
Home & Garden
Industrial
Jewelry
Kindle
Kitchen
Magazines
MP3
Music
Musical
Office
Outdoor
Pet
Photo
Software.
Sporting
Tools
Toys
Unbox
VHS
Games
Watches
Wireless

Acoustics of American English Speech: A Dynamic Approach

Acoustics of American English Speech: A Dynamic Approach

enlarge enlarge 
Authors: Joseph P. Olive, Alice Greenwood, John Coleman
Publisher: Springer
Category: EBooks

List Price: $125.00
Buy New: $100.00
You Save: $25.00 (20%)

Buy

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 107326

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: 1
Pages: 412
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.9

Dewey Decimal Number: 421.54
ASIN: B000RGSUKY

Publication Date: May 21, 1993
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours



Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This book presents the most contemporary and comprehensive description of the acoustics of the sounds used in American English. Intended to serve as an introductory text for students and professionals interested in acoustic phonetics, linguistics, physics, electrical engineering, and computer science, the authors bring to the subject the points of view of both linguistics and physics. The book uses numerous examples of acoustic spectrograms to show the continuities and variability of natural speech. The book begins by introducing the basic concepts of phonetics, phonology, and linguistics to readers whose background is in physics or engineering and introducing the physics of sound generation and analysis for speech scientists and linguists. The authors then use the tools developed in the first part to examine the characteristics of individual phonemes as well as the changes introduced when individual sounds are combined in speech. Modern applications of speech acoustics, especially speech synthesis and recognition, are also discussed. PFROM THE REVIEWS: PPHYSICS TODAY "The result is a book that should be useful as a reference source as well as a textbook...The book is likely to appear on the shelves of most speech scientists and serious students of speech acoustics. It deserves to be read by a larger audience, however, because it has much to teach us, beginners and experts alike, about the language we use every day. Best of all, it is written in a style that is easy to read and understand."


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Bell Lab's Recreation of Visible Speech   February 16, 2003
Donald S. Cooper Ph.D. (Bowling Green, Ohio United States)
This is a group effort from a trio of investigators at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, an institution whose researchers were among the creators of modern acoustic phonetics. It is almost a research monograph disguised as a textbook, published by a distinguished scientific publisher. This leads to frustration of the specialist reader at times, when one looks for technical summaries of the material which may be lacking. The book could be considered a complete revision of the classic Bell Labs book by Potter, Kopp, and Green (Kopp) under the title Visible Speech, published in 1947 and including with broader material on speech acoustics and its applications a 225-page description of the sounds of American English from an acoustic point of view. p The book is a systematic description of the phonetics of American English based on acoustic data from one male informant, a native of Pittsburgh, with limited data from a woman speaker. This is a weakness shared by most of the literature on speech acoustics; because the fundamental frequency of women's speech is higher than that of men, women's speech is technically more difficult to analyze precisely in acoustic terms. The limitation to one main subject is far outweighed by the precious systematic data which the book contains for most aspects of American English phonetics. Of course, it also suggests further investigation of the ways in which humans speaking somewhat different versions of the same language understand one another, which could be said to constitute the other, perceptual, side of the subject matter of this work. This aspect, by the way, is well reviewed in the excellent chapters on perception in J.M.Picket's revised book The Acoustics of Speech Communication (Allyn and Bacon, 1999). p The Bell authors provide valuable introductory chapters on basic concepts of phonetics and phonology, and speech acoustics. There is a growing literature on the basic concepts of acoustic phonetics, such as the new editions of the well-established books by Ladefoged (1996) and Kent and Read (2001), which some readers may wish to consult. Then follows a chapter on the static properties of speech sounds; many treatments of acoustic phonetics never get past this elementary level. However, the book by Olive, Greenwood, and Coleman makes a precious contribution in the systematic following chapters on the treatment of English sounds in context. Many individual aspects of this topic are well treated in the research literature, but brthis comprehensive investigation of the speech of a single speaker is unique. There is broad treatment not only of formant transitions between consonants and vowels, but also of consonant clusters and interactions, contextual variants of sounds such as [l] and [r](using standard notation for phonetic units), and a long final chapter on acoustic variability of sounds and dialectal variability. A precious feature of the index is that it not only includes a detailed phonetic and technical listing but also gives the location in the text of treatments of individual sound sequences, shortening many searches.p Apart from its merits as a research monograph, this work bralso works well as a classroom text. The reviewer has used it in a class on applied English phonetics with extensive spectrographic lab experience, in which the students studied their own speech acoustically and compared it to the results described by Olive et al. A particularly valuable role of the book is for non-English speakers who are able to use the objective character of the acoustic analysis to bypass the obstacle of uncertain perception of English sounds and assist themselves in improving their mastery of English phonetics. Elementary speech acoustics on this level is not difficult, and this aspect of the work was very much appreciated by foreign students in my class. p This is a work of enormous value to a variety of students and specialists, particularly in phonetics, linguistics, and speech pathology, but also for engineers and the increasing ranks of those working on speech recognition. The reviewer finds that he has had to gradually increase the number of loaner copies of this work on his office shelf, because the Olive book is not in the local library, and his students want prolonged access to a work which describes English acoustic phonetics competently and(within its limits)comprehensively. This book is is not as well known as it deserves to be. p The reviewer has some complaints. In general, the articulatory discussions are not as accurate or precise as the acoustic ones; of course, that is not what the book is about. If one must mention published collections of papers on speech acoustics, the indispensable book Readings in Acoustic Phonetics edited by Lehiste (1967 with several reprints) which preserves publication format is more useful than the one cited. It is regrettable and puzzling that there is not a single first-author work of Gordon Peterson in the bibliography. These are minor details. This work deserves to be well known, and to be in all major university libraries and institutions in which linguistic or clinical phonetics has significance, as well as in scholars' libraries. It should be read carefully and repeatedly until its pages are dirty and scribbled on, like my copy. The first acoustic specification of sounds of a language known to the reviewer was the publication of formant frequencies of whispered vowels published by Samuel Reyher in 1679. The book by Olive and his colleagues reflects a long and proud past, and its subject matter seems at present to be enjoying a deserved revival of interest.

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

CONTEMPORARY FRESCO GAZETTE - ART SEARCH & DIRECTORY - ARTWORLD POSTER SHOP - BOOK SHOP
Related Categories
• English (Specific Aspects)
Dictionaries Thesauruses
Reference
Subjects
Books
• Kindle Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Phonetics Phonics
Words Language
Reference
Kindle Books
Categories
• General Reference
Technology
Science
Kindle Books
Categories