IRIS publication 139284267
Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults
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TY - JOUR - Lee, A., ; Browne, U. - 2013 - December - Logopedics Phoniatrics Vocology - Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults - Published - () - gender effect Irish English nasalance Nasometer normal adults resonance - 38 - 4 - 167 - 172 - The aim was to establish normative nasalance values for Irish English-speaking adults. Thirty men and 30 women with normal resonance read aloud 16 sentences from the Irish nasality assessment protocol, the Zoo passage, and the Rainbow passage. The speech samples were recorded using the Nasometer II 6400. Results of a mixed between – within subjects ANOVA indicated no significant gender effect on nasalance scores. The speakers showed significantly higher nasalance scores for high-pressure consonant sentences than low-pressure consonant sentences, and for the Rainbow passage than total test sentences. There was no significant difference between high-pressure consonant sentences and the Zoo passage. Compared to previous studies, the Irish young adults had lower nasalance scores than Irish children and than young adults with North American dialects. - https://doi.org/10.3109/14015439.2012.679965 DA - 2013/12 ER -
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@article{V139284267, = {Lee, A., and Browne, U.}, = {2013}, = {December}, = {Logopedics Phoniatrics Vocology}, = {Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults}, = {Published}, = {()}, = {gender effect Irish English nasalance Nasometer normal adults resonance}, = {38}, = {4}, pages = {167--172}, = {{The aim was to establish normative nasalance values for Irish English-speaking adults. Thirty men and 30 women with normal resonance read aloud 16 sentences from the Irish nasality assessment protocol, the Zoo passage, and the Rainbow passage. The speech samples were recorded using the Nasometer II 6400. Results of a mixed between – within subjects ANOVA indicated no significant gender effect on nasalance scores. The speakers showed significantly higher nasalance scores for high-pressure consonant sentences than low-pressure consonant sentences, and for the Rainbow passage than total test sentences. There was no significant difference between high-pressure consonant sentences and the Zoo passage. Compared to previous studies, the Irish young adults had lower nasalance scores than Irish children and than young adults with North American dialects.}}, = {https://doi.org/10.3109/14015439.2012.679965}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
AUTHORS | Lee, A., ; Browne, U. | ||
YEAR | 2013 | ||
MONTH | December | ||
JOURNAL_CODE | Logopedics Phoniatrics Vocology | ||
TITLE | Nasalance scores for typical Irish English-speaking adults | ||
STATUS | Published | ||
TIMES_CITED | () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | gender effect Irish English nasalance Nasometer normal adults resonance | ||
VOLUME | 38 | ||
ISSUE | 4 | ||
START_PAGE | 167 | ||
END_PAGE | 172 | ||
ABSTRACT | The aim was to establish normative nasalance values for Irish English-speaking adults. Thirty men and 30 women with normal resonance read aloud 16 sentences from the Irish nasality assessment protocol, the Zoo passage, and the Rainbow passage. The speech samples were recorded using the Nasometer II 6400. Results of a mixed between – within subjects ANOVA indicated no significant gender effect on nasalance scores. The speakers showed significantly higher nasalance scores for high-pressure consonant sentences than low-pressure consonant sentences, and for the Rainbow passage than total test sentences. There was no significant difference between high-pressure consonant sentences and the Zoo passage. Compared to previous studies, the Irish young adults had lower nasalance scores than Irish children and than young adults with North American dialects. | ||
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DOI_LINK | https://doi.org/10.3109/14015439.2012.679965 | ||
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