Dissertation in linguistics: Carla Wikse Barrow
Thesis defence
Date: Friday 20 September 2024
Time: 14.00 – 17.00
Location: Hörsal D7, Södra huset
Carla Wikse Barrow will publicly defend her doctoral thesis ”Swedish voiceless fricatives – A multidimensional investigation of adult and child productions”. Welcome!
Opponent is Professor Benjamin Munson, College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota.
The defense will be conducted in English and interpreted into Swedish Sign Language.
Abstract:
Voiceless fricatives are articulatorily and acoustically complex, and relatively late acquired by children. There are a plenitude of descriptions of voiceless fricatives in other languages, which have revealed language-specific patterns in realisation and acquisition. However, studies of Swedish adult’s voiceless fricatives are dated and small-scale, and knowledge concerning Swedish children’s acquisition of these complex sounds is limited.
This dissertation is based on four papers, three of which investigate acoustic characteristics of adult and child productions of Swedish voiceless fricatives (f, s, and the ”tje” and ”sje” sounds). Static and dynamic, individual and group-level acoustic patterns (primarily spectral features) are described, and between-fricative contrasts are quantified for individual speakers. The fourth paper explores the influence of lexical context and experience on perceptual ratings of children’s voiceless sibilant fricatives (s and ”tje”-sounds). Specifically, listeners with and without clinical experience of assessing child speech (i.e., speech-language pathologists and laypeople) provided gradient ratings of sibilants presented in lexical and non-lexical contexts (i.e., words or CV-syllables).
This work contributes to a better understanding of the characteristics and variability of voiceless fricatives, and provides new insights into children’s acquisition of them. A number of spectral parameters and statistical models were utilised in this work. The results of the fourth study also have relevance for perceptual assessments of speech in the clinic.
Profile page Carla Wikse Barrow
Last updated: August 21, 2024
Source: Department of Linguistics