Sunday, April 21, 2013

Week 15: Reflections

This is my final post for this blog. This week I continued working on some of those problem areas listed in the last blog post, especially the sections that need to be longer and shorter and the quality of my vowels. Getting the velarization and nasalization right also continues to be a problem.

Here's the link to my last recording for the semester:

Final Recording!

When I compare this with the original, and then with some of the intermediate steps, here are some things that I notice:

*Whatever I am specifically working on that week tends to be better than other aspects. When I was working on vowels, my vowels were better. When I was working on rhythm, my rhythm was better, and so on. That's encouraging, because it shows that deliberate practice does work but it also shows how difficult it is to put all of the pieces together in a way that lasts, and it shows how the lack of deliberate practice in a particular area may cause the previous successes to atrophy.

*After a while, I developed my own expectations of what the archetype should sound like that were different from the actual archetype. I created this pattern where I was listening to myself and comparing with previous versions of my own speech rather than with the archetype first. This was especially apparent to me in the last third of the archetype. I've tried to address that problem in these last two weeks, but it still needs work. This helps me to understand how accents fossilize . Students of language may often fall into the pattern of trying to sound more like the mental image they have of a given target dialect rather than the genuine copy of that dialect. This is probably more pronounced when native speakers are not around to help out. I am sure that my Australian accent would have developed much more accurately if I'd had a real Australian giving me feedback. A recording is helpful, but it simply isn't the same thing.

*When I perform in front of the mirror, I notice that my mouth shape is not the same as my archetype's. I'm approximating the sounds in ways that are different from the natural speech of the image that I am trying to imitate. Again, without genuine feedback from a real person, I'm not sure that I can fix that.

*Another area of serious phonological difference is the way I make my /r/'s. I know from studying a few other languages that the /r/ sound is very difficult to change, and I can sense that in myself with this project. Especially in those situations where /r/ is intervocalic or when it is word final but spoken very quickly, it is VERY hard to do it accurately.

*Lastly, although I am a perfectionist and can sense all of these issues in my accent, overall I think that I am happy with the way that it turned out. I may not be able to say anything ELSE in a convincing Australian accent, but I think with this specific archetype I was successful at making it sound neither American nor British. That's an accomplishment. I'm particularly proud of the work that I put into accurate word stress, sentence final rising intonation, and the development of diphthongs. I did my best, and so I guess that's the best that I can do.

If I were ever to do something like this again, I would definitely want someone around who speaks the dialect natively who could give me more genuine feedback. Without that, the effort becomes wearying and loses its value quickly. If I had to do it over again, I would spend more time focusing on the vowels and find other archetypes to work with to expand my practice material. Instrumentalists never work on only one piece at a time, because they might die of boredom. They play their scales and exercises daily, yes, but they also work on multiple pieces simultaneously. I think that would have helped my motivation and perhaps increased my success in this project as well.

I would like to thank you for reading to the end of my blog. I hope that it was enjoyable.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Weeks 13-14: From Back to Front

This week, I started by analyzing some of my previous recordings. I noticed that over the course of the semester my stress, prominence and intonation have consistently improved. My overal quality (nasality and velarization) also sounds better. However, my vowels on the other hand are a different story. They improved when I was specifically working on them but have since dropped back toward American the comfortable American production, particularly with the /eu/, /i/ and /ae/ sounds. I also am having a lot of trouble with inserting American r-fulness into places where it shouldn't be. Finally, I noticed that my specific words and phonemes are much worse at the end of the monologue than at the beginning. This probably reflects the amount of time I've spent working on each section. So, this week my goals are:

       1) Work more on the last 1/3 of the archetype, some on the middle third, and little on the first third

       2) Drill difficult vowels, with the goal of producing them both in an appropriate location (depending on stressed or reduced) and the appropriate length (I'm over-lengthening and over-shortening some of the vowels when I compare my speech to my archetype's speech)

      3) Drill words with problem /r/ sounds, either present or absent, so that my speech will be smoother.

I listened to the archetype and then my own speech. On my vowel transcription pages that I used earlier in the semester, I circled those words that had some serious problems in pausing, consonant changes, vowel rounding and phrase/vowel length. Here is a list of the segments in my archetype that I chose to drill. The majority (but not all) are from the last half of the archetype. Additionally, I numbered lines so that I could refer to each problem's location in the transcript:
Here's the link to this week's audio recording: Week 13 attempt

 Listening to this, although I did trip myself up a few times, the last third of the speech was MUCH better than before. I sound much more natural. I can see how practice really helps. However, I wonder how much this kind of focused practice transfers over into using the accent in another way? In my last blog post I will continue refining my archetype one more time and reflect on what I have learned from the process of doing this project.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Week 12: Nasality and Velarization

Over the past few weeks while I was working on the project described in the last post, I began to notice some differences between the speaker of the passages that I was analyzing and the speaker that I was trying to imitate. One of the big differences that was brought to the forefront was the issue of sound quality; I began to sense that my archetype has a nasal and velar quality to some of her words that is hard to hear, hard to imitate, and different from the speaker in the passages from the Macquarie website. Furthermore, I watched another Australian movie this week, and I noticed that this nasalization pattern is REALLY strong in the brogue dialect of male speakers. So, it must be one of those aspects of Australian English that varies based on dialect. My archetype speaker is, I think, a speaker of "general Australian", which is the one that is in the middle. Some of her phonemes sound like the brogue phonemes, but there are times when her English sounds very much like the "cultivated" Australian dialect.

Here are some of those places in my archetype's speech where the nasal and velar quality is most apparent. I will highlight the nasalized words in yellow and the velarized l's and far back (almost swallowed) vowels in red. The one instance of orange is when I thought I heard both.
"we are trying to change telephone companies...... we rang a whole bunch, most of them were..."

"It certainly sounded like..."

"um awful anyway..."

"and then we finally rang this other place..."

"needed a one-word answer..."

"a whole sentence or a whole paragraph or a whole spiel you know in answer"

"I've never been able to notice before..."


From these examples, you can see that nasalization usually occurs when a string of nearby words all have an /n/, /m/ or /ng/ sound combination. In these instances, the speaker just nasalizes the entire phrase. The velarization of super dark /l/ /r/ and back vowel "o" tends to happen on stressed words or words that show a pause in the sentence, like "like".


To practice, I've practiced listening to the speaker and repeating. I've done this in the short context of the sentence and in the partial and full monologue. I've also spent more time looking in the mirror while I practice. I am noticing that my overall mouth movements seem to have become smaller. I don't know if this means that my accent is getting more accurate and therefore less exaggerated  or if it means my ears and lips have become lazy and I'm not doing as well as I did originally. However, I can say that when I listen to my archetype, I "hear" her differently than I did at the beginning of this project. I would like to think that I sound more like her now than I did in the beginning, also.

Here's my recording for this week:

Week 12: nasalized and velarized syllables

I think that my nasals and velar syllables were ok in this recording, but they could still be better. I'll keep working on these. I also noticed that I've been doing the end of the dialogue quite differently from my archetype. I usually start at the beginning of the dialogue and work through it, so I think in the next week I'll practice working from the back to the front. I'll also re-visit errors that I've been making with /r/ sounds and vowels that still need assistance.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Weeks 10/11: Stress and Prominence

Subtitle: The post in which you learn that Jessica is a crazy person who invents informal research projects and performs them on herself. Just because. 

In the past few weeks I have been periodically practicing difficult sections of my archetype, especially in vowel sounds and stress. I have also "performed" for several non-linguistic friends and asked their opinions of areas where I sound Australian and areas where I still sound American. This has been helpful in determining what I still need to work on.

From a more academic perspective, I wanted to get a little variety and move away form my specific archetype to listen for and practice stress, prosody  and vowel sounds (both stressed and reduced) in other passages that I found on the Macquaire website. Since I have memorized my archetype now, it has become very difficult for me to hear rightly the sounds that I am making when I speak and their relative distance from the target. I thought that if I washed my brain out with deliberate practice of some different target paragraphs, that might help me to get closer to where I want to be.

To compare the prominence patterns, I first recorded myself reading the following four passages in English. I then listened carefully both to my American recordings and the Australian recordings. I marked stressed words with square boxes and highlighted the words in each clause or phrase that I believed was most prominent. In several cases, two or more syllables in a phrase seemed equally prominent to my ears, so I tended to err on the side of over-highlighting prominence. I then analyzed the similarities and differences in prosidy in the four paragraphs, particularly paragraphs 1 and 4.

Me (American) Passage 1                                                                


Australian Passage 1

When comparing these first two, I was impressed by how I found the same exact number of prominent words, but that the points of prominence landed on the same syllables only 10/17 times. That's only 58% of the time! Also, these differences weren't specific to one part of speech. We chose to put adverbs, adjectives, nouns and verbs in the points of prominence with great variation. Sometimes we made similar choices, and sometimes we didn't.  

For passage 2, I noted 21 prominent words in my own speech and 20 in the Australian sample. This paragraph was the most "conversational" of the four passages, and I think that shows in the prominence disparities. In these passages, only 9 points of prominence were in the same locations, or  45% of the time. My hypothesis is that American and Australian English probably has more differences in prosody when we are simply speaking than when we are reading from passages which share more unified cultural narrative patterns. 

                 My Passage 2                                                              Australian Passage 2









I must put in a disclaimer here that even individuals with the same cultural background would likely read these passages with slight alterations in prominence. However, I expect that members of a similar speech community and reading fluency level would be far more alike in their determinations of prominence than only 50-ish% of the time.  Reading skill level, fluency, and familiarity with a particular genre doubtless play a role. Also, I know from experience that we read aloud according to patterns that we have learned from other native speakers. I read in a similar way to that which was read to me by my parents, and while this likely varies somewhat through families, it must also be generalizable across speech communities. (Otherwise, how would we know what to expect from audiobooks?)

 Passage 3 and 4 are excerpts from the Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein, a fantasy story written in Britain by a British man in the mid 20th century. I expected that since the American and Australian narrative literary tradition comes from the same roots, and this passage comes from a different dialect community altogether, the prominence markers in these passages would be more alike. However, I didn't analyze these at all scientifically. My basic premise was "mark all of the stress, then go find the one stressed part in each phrase that is the strongest". Additionally, I didn't mark intonation and how that affected my judgements of prominence. There were several instances where I marked two words very close to each other because the intonation went up on one and down on the other, indicating that this idea, rather than a specific word, is what was really prominent. This occurred in both Australian and my personal sample. I also went back and re-checked the American and Australian samples for passage 3 and 4 a second time, because a significant amount of time passed between when I "measured" passages 1 and 2 and when I did the same to passages 3 and 4.

Here are the pictures of Passages 3 and 4 before modification, but after modification I determined that the prominent point count stands thus:  #3: Australia 29, Me 25. Passage #4: Australia 44, Me 41.
So, for passage 3 the prominent points lined up 13 times, and for passage #4 it lined up 30 times. If I take the higher number from the Australian passage totals as my point of comparison, that means in passage #3 the prominent points correlated 49% of the time and for passage 4 they lined up 68% of the time. This last one is a lot higher!

Australian passage #4

One of the things I found most interesting about passage 4 are some of the sections that did line up! For example, both my version (which I recorded and coded BEFORE listening to the Australian passage, by the way) and the Australian speaker highly emphasized the phrases "two big round pale eyes",  "quite quietly" and "He paddled it with large feet dangling over the side, but never a ripple did he make. Not he." in exactly the same way. This is pretty cool. It demonstrates to me that there are shared conventions for storytelling and narration that have been and continue to be maintained across the globe for our English dialect group, at least among native speakers and for certain types of stories. We have some mutual expectations for how language is supposed to sound, even though we often, as much as half the time in this informal and ridiculously unscientific case study, emphasize different words and phrases in different ways.

So.....how does this relate specifically to making me sound more Australian? Well....I'm not sure it does. But it does help me to understand some of the features that may be playing a role in narration and conversation in different dialects. Additionally, this side project helped me to hear better the differences between cultivated Australian dialect, which is what the narrator of these passages was speaking, and my Archetype, which has a thicker more "brogue-like" accent. I mentioned at the beginning of the post that hearing these sound distinctions was one of the issues I wanted to address at this point in the project. Therefore, I consider that issue addressed.

Because I have realized that these accents are really not the same, I chose not to try and imitate and record these passages, because I think it might actually be detrimental to making me sound like the archetype in terms of phonology. The narrator of these passages doesn't use as much of a nasal sound or the same quality of back vowels that my archetype does. My post next week will return to things that I have been working on related directly to my archetype, particularly nasality and the velarization of back vowels just mentioned.


Sunday, March 24, 2013

Week 8-9: Rhythm and Stress


As we started moving into a discussion of rhythm and reduced speech in class, I went back and made some observations along those lines concerning my archetype. Although I had already marked intonation contours and primary stress early on in this project (see blog entry #2), I began to sense the  significance of the distinctions in stress and prominence when going through the vowel practice passages from Macquarie University in the last few weeks. For example, In American English,  I would stress the following sentence this way, where underlining indicates prominence and the bold capitals indicate stress:

is a LIttle LIPstick perMISsible for WOmen in eGYPtian VIllages.

But the Australian recording stresses it this way:

IS a little LIPstick perMIS-SIble for WOmen in eGYPtian VIllages.

The two patters are primarily the same, but are slightly different on a few words, and also in prominence. Here is another examples from last week's sentences:

American English #2:

THAT man had a BAD habbit of CRAMming his HATS and JACKets into a BAG

Australian #2:
THAT MAN had a BAD HABit of cramming his HATS and JACKets into a BAG

While I realize that the speaker in these particular sentences was exaggerating stress to match the target vowel phonemes, and I also realize the prominence can vary according to speaker and context, I still think that these examples draw attention to how the prosodic features distinguish American and Australian accents. I will test this theory further later, when I look at specific paragraphs from the Macquarie website.

I now sense that the rhythm of this dialect is second only to vowel shape and length in terms of markers that distinctively characterize what is "Australian". They stress things differently from both American English and British English, and in those situations where they do stress the same syllables, the length of those syllables often differs from the other two dialects. I haven't been exposed to enough of the language yet to accurately guess with decent accuracy where the stress and prominence will occur, but I am getting a bit closer. I tend to be more accurate at guessing where the stress is NOT than where it is.

This week I listened carefully and re-transcribed my archetype to emphasize stress and prominence. I bolded words for stress and CAPITALIZED and bolded what I thought showed prominence. I also revisited the intonation contours that I created in weeks 3-4. As I compared what I had written in the new transcript (below) with prosodic patterns I had been imitating, I found several areas where I had been making errors. I had been over emphasizing stressed words in a lot of areas, making the vowels too long. In each phrase there only should be one prominent element, not three or four. Here are three examples:

1) I had been saying something like "Uh MOST of the WERE...you could...I don't KNOW WHERE...like WE...I don't know WHO we WERE SPEAKing to..." when really I should only have emphasized the prominence on "Most" "where" and "speaking".

2) I have been over-stressing "asked" "one"  and "answer" in "we asked her that just NEEDed a one-word answer"

3) In my effort to accurately hit vowel points, I have been overstressing many of the stressed words that do not have prominence in the last three sentences. "I've never been able to notice beFORE how Australians raise their VOICE at the end of a SENTence"   has sounded more like this in my speech: "I'VE NEver been ABle to NOTice beFORE how Australians raise their VOICE at the end of a SENTence"



Thus in this week's recording, which you can find here (Week 9 recording), I did my best to hit the stress and prominence points more accurately. One way that I tried to focus in on this is by being especially careful with the vowels in stressed syllables while giving much less attention to the unstressed vowels. In this way I conserved my conscious energy for prominence and certain vowels, while trying to speed up my overall speaking speed to match my archetype.  I also noticed this week that my speaker is doing some interesting nasal stuff, especially on the word "sound/sounded", which is said 5 times in the dialogue. So, I tried to approximate that in this week's recording, but I think I may not have accomplished my goal.

I also recognize from listening to and analyzing this attempt that I need to spend more time on deliberate practice of the Australian /r/ phoneme, because as I try to develop more smoothness and naturalness in my speech I'm falling back on some American habits.  I also feel that I've reached a point where I've practiced the dialogue so much I can't really tell anymore what is right and what is wrong in my approximations of Australian phonemes. This is frustrating to me, and I can see how this could easily become frustrating to students of English. It is so important to get phonemes accurate at the beginning, because they are much harder to change later. I also am beginning to wish I had a real person to give me feedback. There's a limit to what personal analysis can do, and a native speaker of this dialect would be very useful to me at this point in the dialect acquisition process.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Weeks 6-7: More Vowels and reductions

In these two weeks, I continued to focus primarily on vowel sounds in my Australian accent. I also have been paying attention to reduced forms in the archetype, and trying to improve my fluency in the dialect and accuracy with the reduced and linked words.

Part 1: Vowels Development

Each time I practiced, I warmed up by going through the vowel chart on the Macquaire phonetics and phonology website to practice my sounds and warm up my muscles. I especially focused on the diphthongs to stretch my muscles, which tends to make my mouth rather sore by the time I'm done practicing.

For several sessions, I got away from the specific archetype and instead practiced listening to and repeating both words (vowel words) and sentences (Vowel sentences) from the Macquaire website. They had a good female listening voice for me to try and copy, although I think the accent of my archetype is actually slightly different from the one used here in this website. The Macquaire university uses a more educated, urban dialect. While my archetype is not quite as thick as the thickest possible "brogue" Australian accent, I think that it is somewhere in-between. I will probably return to these exercises periodically for further practice and warm ups.

Here is my recording of these sentences:   Recording of Australian vowel practices

These are from the vowel sentences page, see link above. I'm doing pretty well with some of the sounds I think. I am still struggling with consistency in the distinctions between /ɔ/, /ɐ/, /ɒː/, /ʊ/, primarily because my dialect of English doesn't really distinguish between the first three and the /ʊ/ is different in Australian than it is in NAE. Also, my ʉ  is just about right but still too tense, so I need to work on making that one more natural. Distinctions between the front vowels /e/ and /æ/ also need continued improvement.

Part 2: Reductions

My archetype speaker speaks quite quickly, and I have from the beginning been trying to notice and reproduce the ways in which she reduces the language. Many of her consonant linking/reduction strategies are identical to American English patterns, as are some of the vowel strategies. Quick, unstressed vowels become shorter, laxer and more centralized. Many syllables reduce to the schwa.

Here are some examples of reduced/linked phrases that I have been trying hard to practice accurately when I increase my speaking speed:

1) "I don't know who we were speaking to" -->       ˈɑe dəʉ̆͜͜ ͜nəʉ̆ ˌhʉː wi:͜ wɛ: 'spi:kɪŋ tʉ:

2) "It wasn't the recorded message it was a person" --> əʔ wɐzn̩ʔ ðə ɹɪko:dəɾ͜ mesedʒ͜ ət wɐz ‿ə pɜ:sən

3) ..."that just needed a one word answer"  --> θət̆ jəs ni:ɾ͜e ɾə wen͜ w̃ɛ:͜ dænsɛ:

4) "I've never been able to notice before" -- ɑev nevɛː bɪ‿næɪbl̩ tə̃‿nəʉtɪs bəfo:


Finally, here's my most recent performance of the archetype. 

Week 7 attempt

In the performance of my archetype, I don't feel that my accuracy at hitting the vowel points has improved much. However, I am noticing that it is sounding much more natural when I switch over into my "accent voice", and this itself is evidence of improvement. My muscles are adjusting more quickly and accurately into the new positions that I have practiced (rather or not those positions are actually where I need to be), so while I may not be "right on" in my pronunciation, the deliberate practice is helping me develop some sort of approximation of an Australian accent that is becoming ever easier to produce.

In weeks 8-9 I looked more closely at rhythm and stress, which is what I will discuss in the next post.


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Week 5: Vowels

This week, I studied diagrams of vowel quadrangles from Macquarie University and practiced making the sounds with different words. What I noticed most (and had also noticed just by listening) is that the high /i:/ and /I/ vowels are very close together and extremely frontwards in the mouth. Also, the high back vowel /u/ is really more forward, high and central than in NAE, and this one vowel and the diphthongs associated with it make a big difference in the overall cadence of the dialect. Additionally, I was quite astonished to see the trajectory of vowel movement localized so frontwards for so many of the diphthongs. This really provided me with visual evidence for why it seems like Australians have a "chewing" vocal posture. Rather extreme movement is required.

 

 


I also divided my archetype into three sections, and transcribed the vowels in the entire passage using the Cox and Evans (1997) Australian English transcription system provided by Macquarie University (http://clas.mq.edu.au/phonetics/phonetics/ausenglish/index.html, see screen shot below). I decided to diagram these words using the Australian symbols because I hoped it would help my eyes and my mouth get connected on pronouncing these vowels in ways that are different from American English  Using the NAE equivalents might cause me to hear in my head the wrong sounds, but if I associate the altered symbols with the production of  those vowels in a different location or with a different diphthong movement pattern, then I might be able to make more accurate phonemes more quickly.


Over the course of week 5 I transcribed my three sections and practiced. Here are copies of my transcription notes:



Finally, here is the resulting audio recording of my week 5 work.

Week 5 Attempt: Vowels

I recorded the speech more slowly this time, to try and get as close to the full vowel sounds as I can.

Next week I'll work on making it sound more natural when spoken swiftly. I also plan to use Praat next week to analyze the quality of some of my vowels and compare them and improve my overall vowel quality. If I have time, I may look for some vocal articulator exercises to help warm myself up before practicing and activate some of the lazy muscles in my face.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Weeks 3-4 Vocal tone and r-coloring

During weeks 3 and 4 of the semester I did practice, but I did not do so 8 separate times. Here I record the progress that I did make.

First, I chose to work on several different things related to my vocal tone (going off of the voice quality settings) and ended by analyzing the r-coloring of my speaker.

Days 1 and 2: On these days, I carefully analyzed the vocal tones of my speaker. After comparing my recording from week #2 with the original, I noticed that overal my voice sits at a higher pitch, and there is too much tension in the way I make most of my vowels sounds. I needed to both find a way to relax my jaw so that more of my vowels are rounder and further back, and also carefully monitor when and how my speaker inflects her voice. I started by marking with intonation lines where the voice goes up and down, and highlighting places of extreme rises or falls. I also noted places where the speaker pauses and goes up or down slightly, so that I could get a visual picture of what it is I needed to be saying. I then spent some time practicing this. Below are images of the pages I used for this practice.

            

On days 3-4, I re-recorded with audacity and tried to compare. This was good for comparing length of words and shape of the sound, but not so much for the quality of vowels that I was aiming at.However, close intensive listening to specific sections of the recording and comparing it to my own cause me to notice how very important small changes in stress and tone from word to word in a sentence can alter the understanding of dialect. In those places where I stressed the "wrong" syllables, the vowels are the wrong length and the wave forms different in size. Additionally, I noticed that many of the vowels produced by my Architype have rounder wave forms than mine. In week 5, I plan to look at the two audio files (mine from week 4 and the archetype) and compare them in Praat rather than audacity. Later in the semester, when we discuss rhythm, I also hope to make a chart of the rhythm of the specific words.

Archetype: "It wasn't a recorded message, It was a person"

Me: "It wasn't a recorded message, It was a person"

Lastly, I analyzed the recording for R-coloring. I had noticed that at times the /r/ sounds very american like, and at other times it sounded very British like (r-less). This evaluation caused me to see that "r-full" and "r-less" are not simply an on-off option switch, but rather a continuum. When I listened to my own recording, I recognized myself doing all kinds of funky things with the "r"s to try and sound un-American in my first two recordings, even trilling one of them, but I certainly haven't been making them consistently "Australian". Below are my observations of the patterns.



I practiced this as well. Finally, I made my week 4 recording. Here is the link to it:

Aussie Accent attempt 3

Analysis: Overall I am pleased with my development in this recording. I feel that the vocal quality is better, my r sounds are better, and my vowels are getting closer. I think this is primarily due to my attempts to change the shape of my mouth and look at myself in the mirror to try and imitate my speaker. This has been helping with the vocal shape. My archetype has a "ringing" tone to some of her high dipthongs, and I hit it a couple of times in this recording, although not entirely. There are places where I seem to fall out of charcter, but I've still got some time to work on it.

My plan for next week is to analyze Praat diagrams of my speech compared with my archetype, transcribe key vowel sounds and try to get a feel for the movements in the vowel quadrangle needed to imitate this speaker.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Week 2: Listening and Research


 This week, my goal for the project was to try and set the vocal quality settings that I would need to adequately imitate an Australian accent.

According to Celce-Murcia, Brinton and Goodwin (2010), each dialect or language has not only specific vowel and consonant sounds that they use, but also speaker group-wide characteristics of how they position their vocal organs and utilize muscle tension. This has been shown to be important in several research studies, but much of the information about a given language's vocal quality characteristics are "too subjective or unreliable to merit pedagogical application at the present time." (page 32). There was little advice in the text itself on how to go about finding and developing vocal quality settings.  Thus I got the impression that while setting the Australian vocal quality for my own voice would be very important in the development of a convincing accent, I must figure out for myself what those subjective qualities are. So, in this last week (Jan 21-28) I used three strategies to try and discover aspects of a vocal quality setting for my accent.


First, I endeavored to listen to as much Australian English as possible (via movies and YouTube videos). This activity doubled as an effective excuse to have some down time. I spent about 5 hours this week watching  Australian films and TV shows, focusing on an analysis of the female voices and contrastive analysis with my own accent. I justified this also by acknowledging that many methods of teaching pronunciation emphasize listening as a critical first step (Audio-Lingual method, the Direct method, TPR, and even CLT). Celce-Murcia, Brinton and Goodwin (2010) specifically state that listening discrimination is critical, because you must be able to hear the difference in sounds before you can accurately produce them (46). Furthermore, I'm an auditory learner, so I considered this even more critical for my own personal learning style. I hope to continue exposing myself to the Australian dialect in various forms throughout the semester, although not as intensively as I did this week.

Secondly, I spent about two hours this weekend looking up further information/research about Australian dialects and pronunciation. As an academically minded person, I sometimes find that reading research about something helps me to understand it better, which may in some way help me produce it (eventually). Lastly, I listened to and imitated my archetype each day at least once. Next week I will spend less time on the listening and research and more time in deliberate practice to try and set my vocal quality as closely as possible to my archetype.

Here are the most relevant bits of information that I gleaned from my research this week:
          *I first observed that in general, Male actors tended to have stronger, thicker and more identifiably "Australian" accents than women. Additionally, many of the female speaker's vowels were exremely close or identical to some varieties of British English. I later found the following chart from Cox (2006) detailing the differences in vowel quadrangles between male and female teen speakers of Standard Australian English.
This chart shows visually how much lower the low vowels are for female speakers, and how much more "frontwards" and tense the high ones tend to be. I expect that this chart, as well as the several others in Cox's other research articles will help me as I learn to approximate these vowels. 


           *Overall, I observed that this dialect is much closer to British English varieties than American ones, and thus I can see that the vocal quality settings, or where I put my articulators and my muscle tension, may indeed be one of the most obvious distinguishing factors of the Australian accent. The other really obvious distinction is in sentence stress and intonation, suprasegmental features that I will deal with in another post.

            * It seemed to me through listening that the back of the tongue is generally lower and cupped, while at the same time the front of my mouth feels much tighter than when I speak my native dialect. At first I was not sure whether this is a symptom of attempting any new dialect, or if the dialect itself truly requires that kind of vocal posturing. However, the chart above seemed to support these observations. I further found the following website from Macquaire University in Sydney (where Felicity Cox teaches) that contains comparison vowel charts for North American, Australian, New Zealand and RP English varieties. I will spend time studying this chart and making use of it in the future.

http://clas.mq.edu.au/phonetics/phonetics/vowelgraphs/index.html

Finally, here is my second archetype attempt. While working on this second attempt, I focused on keeping my back vowels low with my tongue cupped a bit, tried to copy the way my archetype speakers' mouth looked in the front (very open with front vowels pushed out) and more closely copying her intonation and stress than last time. I also emphasized eliminating final "r" sounds and elongating the stressed diphthongs.


Attempt #2

Although I am still cringing at a lot of the really bad mistakes and poor guesses at individual sounds, I can tell that the overall tone of my voice has improved since last time. In the initial attempt my pitch was much too high and unnatural. I'm closer on the vowels this time than I was before, and I was able to notice some specific consonant sounds that need work as well (especially s's and r's). My goal for next week is to continue to improve my vocal tone, create quality settings, and analyze in audacity the wave forms of the two recordings to compare overall quality.




Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Introduction and Initial Attempt

On this blog, I will post the progress that I make in the next 14 weeks with developing and imitating an Australian accent. This is a project for Pedagogical Phonology class, Spring 2013.
Each week, I will focus on a very specific area of phonology, and will engage in deliberate practice in that area for 30 minutes, four days per week. I will choose my focus area based on what we are currently covering in class, most likely in the following order: 
      • voice quality setting
      • consonants
      • vowels
      • connected speech
      • stress
      • rhythm
      • prominence
      • intonation

Here is the video that I chose as my Archetype. I will focus on the 0:00-1:20 section of the clip:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAvHr9paSmc

I decided on a dialect of English rather than another language because I felt I would be better able to hear and judge my own progress. Also, I hoped that it would help me develop a better understanding of the quality of vowels and consonants in different varieties of English, which would in turn help me better explain these sounds to future students and help them improve their English pronunciation.

I chose Australian because I think it will be both difficult and interesting. Most of my English dialect exposure has been with American southern, American standard, and (through media) British varieties of English. I wanted to choose something that I was less familiar with so that I would be less likely to "naturally" gravitate toward the correct sounds based on experience and would have to put in significant effort to force myself to do it correctly.

I chose this archetype because it is of a female speaker who is speaking naturally. I did not want to choose a speech (like from a politician), a narrative (like the narrated cartoon Mary and Max), or a male speaker (like Steve Irwin) because I want to experience a natural speech pattern and fluency level that matches my own female voice and is more realistic. When I train students to speak in English I try to help them learn to speak naturally, so I felt it was only fair to apply these methods to myself as
well. Additionally, I liked this video because I find it ironic that I will be imitating a person with an Australian accent discussing her preference for and a peculiarity of said accent.

Here is a link to my initial recording:

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/41456124/Initial%20Attempt%20(1).mov

As my initial recording clearly demonstrates, this attempt of the accent comes off like a bad combination of British English patterns with a few Australian-like diphthongs occasionally thrown in. I've got a lot of work to do. The areas of most significant difference between my recording and the archetype are in vowel length and quality, connected speech (while maintaining these qualities), and rhythm. I have a few things that I need to work on in terms of prominence and intonation, but I expect these last two items will be easier to match than the others. I have chosen a relatively good archetype match for my own vocal quality, so while I do need to work on matching the attitude that is carried in my voice in certain sentences, it is definitely the sounds of the dialect that are going to give me the most difficulty  They are tighter and shorter than British English in some places, but longer and more lax than my American English in other places.

In the next week I will focus on getting closer to an accurate vocal quality setting. I will try to match the tone and register of the speaker and start getting a feel for the ways I need to change the shape of my mouth to make this thing work. I am looking forward to discovering and utilizing online resources for this accent training, and I sincerely hope that by the end of this semester I will be able to produce an 80-second recording that will be only slightly offensive to Australian ears. Or at least sound not so much like a bad British accent.