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Identification and social evaluation of dialectal Greek intonation. S. Gryllia A. Arvaniti M. Baltazani E. Adamou Univ. of Potsdam UC San Diego Univ . of Ioannina CNRS-Lacito M. Terkourafi N. Vergis S. Tsiplakou
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Identification and social evaluation of dialectal Greek intonation S. Gryllia A. Arvaniti M. Baltazani E. Adamou Univ. of Potsdam UC San Diego Univ. of Ioannina CNRS-Lacito M. Terkourafi N. Vergis S. Tsiplakou UIUC UIUC Open Univ. of Cyprus
Funding Worldwide Universities Network (WUN) research program, funded by the University of Illinois (2009-2010) Lost in intonation: The interaction of intonation and meaning in the speech of L1, L2 and heritage speakers of Greek and its implications for cross-cultural communication and education Coordinator: Marina Terkourafi, UIUC
Intonation and varieties of Greek We use the term intonationto refer to the use of pitch to convey pragmatic meaning in a linguistically structured way (cf. Ladd 2008). Varieties of Greek we examine • Corfiot Greek • Cretan Greek (Heraclion) • Cypriot Greek • Heritage Greek from the USA • Heritage Greek from Germany • L3 Greek spoken by Roma trilinguals in Thrace These varieties are compared to Standard Greek (SG)
Research questions It is unclear • what role intonational variation plays in interactions between speakers of different varieties of the same language • whetherintonationis instrumental in identifyingthevarietyspoken • whetherintonationaffectslistenerattitudestowards a givenvariety
Experiments We address these issues by examining listener reactions to the six varieties of Greek mentioned earlier (Corfiot, Cretan, Cypriot, Heritage Germany, Heritage US, Roma) We investigated • whether Athenian listeners (speakers of Standard Greek) can use intonational cues to identify these varieties (identification experiment) • whether the differences affect listener attitudes towards the talkers (rating experiment)
Examples • Cretan • Germany heritage Greek • Cypriot • Corfu Greek • SG • Roma • US heritage Greek
Identification experiment Stimuli • 8 polar questions • 8 wh-questions • Few dialectal features other than intonation (as our production results show; Tsiplakou et al. 2011) • 8 polar & 8 wh-questions from Standard Greek as control • Total: 2 question types × 7 varieties × 8 exemplars = 112 stimuli • Participants • 24 students from the University of Athens (age range: 19-23) from each of the six varieties
Procedure • The participants listened to every stimulus twice and answered a forced-choice question about the dialect of the talker • They were given eight choices: • the six varieties under investigation • Standard Greek (SG) • Northern Greek (as control)
Results • Better than chance (12.5%) identification • some varieties, like Athenian and Cypriot Greek, were identified more successfully than others • some were not: Heritage Greek from Germany: 3.1% • Identification rates were not consistent across question types and varieties • e.g. Cypriot polar questions were more easily identified than Cypriot wh-questions • Non-random misidentifications • Heritage Greek from Germany misidentified as Standard Greek • Cretan misidentified as Ionian Greek , Athenian or Northern Greek
Rating experiment Stimuli • Same 112 stimuli as in the identification experiment Procedure • Participants listened to each stimulus once and evaluated the talker using a 5-point scale • Friendly • Conservative • Educated • Sincere • Curt Participants • 11 students from the U. of Athens (age range: 19-23)
Results • The listeners rated the SG talkers more positively than dialectal talkers for all features except conservatism • SG talkers received high ratings for positive features (friendly, educated, sincere) and low ratings for negative features (conservative, curt) • Corfiot talkers were the most negatively evaluated, followed by the Roma who were rated least educated
Red squares: varieties that received significantly higher scores than others Blue squares: varieties that received significantly lower scores than others
Discussion: general • Intonational differences can be used to identify the variety spoken • This applies even when there are minimal segmental cues to the origin of the talkers • These differences serve not only to identify the talker; they also affect the evaluation of the talkers themselves
Discussion: non-random misidentifications • The results also show non-random mis-identifications, indicating perceptual maps of Greek dialectology that participants may have • e.g. identifying island speakers as a generic group (cf. results for Corfu and Crete)
Discussion: heritage speakers • Intonation was sufficient for better than chance identification in all cases except Heritage Greek from Germany • The low identification rates and misidentification with SG is supported by our production data: differences between the intonation of these and SG speakers were minimal (Tsiplakou et al. 2011) • The lack of accent of the heritage speakers from Germany may be due to their close links to Greece, where they visit regularly • Germany heritage speakers contrast with US heritage speakers who were most often taken for heritage speakers from Germany or for Cypriot speakers (i.e. they were perceived as “other”) • This could be due to their less extensive contact with Greece and markedly different melodies
Discussion: the role of melody • Not all melodies are equal: for some groups, polar questions led to better identification rates than wh-questions • This result is likely due to a greater degree of difference between SG melodies and dialectal ones for polar questions in some varieties and wh-questions in others • This result corroborates our claim that identification was indeed based on the melody and not on any segmental differences among varieties • Cypriot polar questions, in which the final rise-fall is aligned differently with the text than in SG, were clearly more easily identified as Cypriot than wh-questions, which show few if any differences from SG • US heritage Greek speakers seemed to have better acquired the SG polar question melody (which is quite distinct) but not the wh-question melody (which is closer to their English patterns)
Conclusion • Intonation plays a crucial role in variety identification and affects the evaluation of the talkers themselves, not just of their way of speaking • Understanding the role of intonation in sociolinguistic variation is therefore of importance • Further research is necessary with improvements on the present design: • More comparable – but still ecologically valid – stimuli across varieties • Elimination of segmental differences (to confirm results) by using synthesized dialectal melodies with SG segmentals • and dialectal segmental with SG melodies
References • Adamou, E. (2010). Bilingual speech and language ecology in Greek Thrace: Romani and Pomak in contact with Turkish. Language in Society 39: 147-171. • Ladd, D. R. (2008) Intonational Phonology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press • Tsiplakou, S., A. Arvaniti, M. Baltazani, E. Adamou, S. Gryllia, M. Terkourafi, C. Themistocleous, N. Vergis, S. Armosti (2011). Intonational variation in polar and wh- questions across seven varieties of Greek. 6th ICLAVE, Freiburg, Germany.
THE RESEARCH TEAM Stella Gryllia AmaliaArvaniti Mary Baltazani Evangelia Adamou Marina Terkourafi Nikos Vergis StavroulaTsiplakou
RESEARCH TEAM ADDRESSES • Stella Gryllia, Univ. of Potsdamgryllia@uni-potsdam.de • Amalia Arvaniti, UC San Diego aarvaniti@ucsd.edu • Mary Baltazani, Univ. of Ioanninamarybalt@gmail.com • Evangelia Adamou, CNRS-Lacitoadamou@vjf.cnrs.fr • Marina Terkourafi, UIUC mt217@illinois.edu • Nikos Vergis, UIUC vergis1@illinois.edu • Stavroula Tsiplakou, Open Univ. of Cyprusstavroula.tsiplakou@ouc.ac.cy