me: overwhelmed with schoolwork and having never taken linguistics in my life Also me: yeah sure making a chart of my dialect's vowels sounds like a fine use of my time
I taught myself English. After 20 years of practice I finally have a solid native-like accent. I'm moving to Paris and I'm teaching myself French, and this time I want to nail a native-lie accent (in this case Parisian) using a more rational approach. I just created a "standard" vowel space by following this tutorial and using recordings of a guy online who has a very similar voice to mine, and I intend to compare my own vowel space so that I can improve. Thank you so much dude!
Thank you for this!! I unfortunately have zero experience with computers or code, is there a program or site that can take my speech values and do this for me, even in a condensed or abridged way? I do think in the future I might have to learn how to do it myself, in detail, but for now I'm wondering if you (or any other viewers!) know of a more basic/simplified way to do it?
There's a step at 7:49 that appears to be done with a keyboard shortcut. This is when you told R Studio to read the table of formants. As I'm new to R, I don't know what you've done and how to replicate it. Something similar happens at 9:20, where you told R Studio to take the end points of a trajectory. Could someone please explain how to do these steps?
I was working on a PC and pressed ctrl+enter to run the lines of code that were selected. There's a similar shortcut for mac computers as well, but I don't know what the button is.
that looks like the kind of error that could happen if you didn't save the formant table as a csv (it's easy to accidentally save it as a different kind of file)
me: overwhelmed with schoolwork and having never taken linguistics in my life
Also me: yeah sure making a chart of my dialect's vowels sounds like a fine use of my time
iconic
I taught myself English. After 20 years of practice I finally have a solid native-like accent. I'm moving to Paris and I'm teaching myself French, and this time I want to nail a native-lie accent (in this case Parisian) using a more rational approach. I just created a "standard" vowel space by following this tutorial and using recordings of a guy online who has a very similar voice to mine, and I intend to compare my own vowel space so that I can improve. Thank you so much dude!
12:09 i love how the face mask is even in the right placement
Great resource. Thanks for taking the time to make this and also for sharing your coding.
Exactly what I need for my accent study. Thank you!
Very helpful for my MA Forensic Phonetics 🙏🙏
This is an amazing resource. Thank you for the time that you invested in this and other productions.
I've found some standalone programs to make vowel charts based on Formants if you want to hear about them, let me know.
I’d like to hear about them, what are they?
Thank you for this!!
I unfortunately have zero experience with computers or code, is there a program or site that can take my speech values and do this for me, even in a condensed or abridged way?
I do think in the future I might have to learn how to do it myself, in detail, but for now I'm wondering if you (or any other viewers!) know of a more basic/simplified way to do it?
This is about as condensed as I could make it :) but maybe someone else might have developed an automatic system
do u have any video on tone and intonation?
how do you figure out what formant settings to use for your voice? or is it just a trial-and-error process
It can be very challenging. We have a video on that topic here:
ruclips.net/video/fsGIecMgTzQ/видео.html
this is so cool!! appreciate it very much
In the table some vowels have 2 codes. Why is it so?
I got the codes on Wikipedia but am unable to link them in my rstudio.
There's a step at 7:49 that appears to be done with a keyboard shortcut. This is when you told R Studio to read the table of formants. As I'm new to R, I don't know what you've done and how to replicate it. Something similar happens at 9:20, where you told R Studio to take the end points of a trajectory. Could someone please explain how to do these steps?
I was working on a PC and pressed ctrl+enter to run the lines of code that were selected. There's a similar shortcut for mac computers as well, but I don't know what the button is.
Thank you@@listenlab_umn ! I really appreciate you taking the time to respond. I made a chart of my own vowels following your instructions. :)
When i plot the values the ggplot(.) Shows an error. If i remove the "." It says error in function(x(i)),....
Is this Joey Stanley?
nope :) it's Matthew Winn
I am a faculty at a uni in Pakistan
Your video has been a great resource. Could you please share your email?
I am trying to do this myself and whenever i get to the df
that looks like the kind of error that could happen if you didn't save the formant table as a csv (it's easy to accidentally save it as a different kind of file)
Dear how do u link IPA???
the IPA symbols are in the R script linked at the bottom of the video description:
github.com/ListenLab/make_vowel_space/blob/main/Plot_vowel_space.R
can u help me in analysing f0?
thank you that's so useful.
What is this application R?
Nope, Praat.
2:37 sounds funny =)
finally i did that... thank u