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Links for Linguistics, Phonetics, Speech & Hearing
Thanks to Karen Steffen Chung, National Taiwan University
<karchung@ccms.ntu.edu.tw> and Ninik Poedjianto
<npoedjianto@yahoo.co.uk> who compiled many of these links and added
their comments.
I. Linguistics
Metaphors
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to Links Index
II. Phonetics, Speech & Hearing
- Bucknell University (PA): Linguistics 105 and 110 pages. (Links
to pages on lots of linguistics-related topics)
- Georgetown
University Introduction to Linguistics - Links to
pages on many linguistic topics, including phonetics/phonology (unfortunately
the 'scripts of the world' link seems to be out of order); also links
to more collections of links.
- Acoustic
cues in differentiating phonemes - from UCL. Isolating acoustic
cues in phoneme recognition; descriptions, sound files; good companion
to chapter 11 of Fry (see (6)).
- Simplified
Vowel Synthesis Interface - from the University of Delaware.
Synthesize non-nasalized monopthongal English vowels using the Klatt
synthesizer. Set F0, F1, F2, and duration in ms yourself, and see
what you come up with. Links to more complex CV synthesis and general
synthesis interfaces.
- Zona
Land - by Ed Zobel. Excellent interactive tutorials on the physics
of waves (with links to other physics topics); I find them to be
well-matched companions to D. B. Fry's The Physics of Speech
(Cambridge). Example of things you can do at this site: draw two waves
yourself then watch how they interfere with each other. VRML plug-in
required for some parts. Highly recommended.
- The
Physics Classroom: Sound Waves and Music - from Glenbrook South High
School. A good physics tutorial site with units on waves and decibels;
this has dense and very instructive explanatory texts, along with
animated graphics.
- Standing
Waves and Sound - from Concordia College. Samples of some audible
frequencies (100 to 5,000 Hz), along with other information on waves.
- Understanding
decibels - from the Handbook for Acoustic Ecology, Cambridge
Street Publishing, 1999. Web vesrion from Simon Fraser University.
Technical but clear and potentially useful. With sound files.
- Decibel
level demonstration - from All Tech Insulation. Compare sounds
with an increasingly lower decibel level.
- Sound Pressure
Levels - from CoolMath.com. Decibel level list
Speech Synthesis
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Links Index
III. Automatic Translation
IV. PAGES OF LINKS
V. VIDEOS
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