ScholarGate
المساعد

قارن الطرق

راجع الطرق التي اخترتها جنبًا إلى جنب؛ الصفوف المختلفة مميَّزة.

Sociophonetic Analysis×Apparent-Time Analysis×
المجالعلم اللغةعلم اللغة
العائلةProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
سنة النشأة20061963
صاحب الطريقةSociophoneticians (William Labov; Paul Foulkes; Erik R. Thomas)William Labov
النوعWorkflow correlating acoustic phonetic measurement with social factorsInferential design for detecting language change in progress
المصدر التأسيسيFoulkes, P., Scobbie, J. M., & Watt, D. (2010). Sociophonetics. In W. J. Hardcastle, J. Laver, & F. E. Gibbon (Eds.), The Handbook of Phonetic Sciences (2nd ed., pp. 703–754). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN: 9781405145909Labov, W. (1963). The social motivation of a sound change. Word, 19(3), 273–309. DOI ↗
الأسماء البديلةSociophonetics, Sociophonetic Variation Analysis, Phonetic Variation AnalysisApparent-Time Construct, Apparent-Time Hypothesis, Age-Stratified Change Analysis
ذات صلة44
الملخصSociophonetic analysis sits at the intersection of acoustic phonetics and variationist sociolinguistics. It applies the precise, quantitative measurement of phonetic variables — vowel formants, voice onset time (VOT), the spectral moments of /s/, and many others — to socially structured samples of speech, then correlates those measurements with social factors such as age, social class, gender, ethnicity, and region. The result is a fine-grained, statistically defensible account of how phonetic detail carries social meaning and how it patterns across communities and across time, increasingly built on large-scale, automated measurement.Apparent-time analysis is the foundational variationist method for detecting language change in progress without waiting for time to pass. Introduced by William Labov in his 1963 study of Martha's Vineyard, it compares the speech of speakers of different ages sampled at a single moment and treats the age dimension as a proxy for historical time: if younger speakers use a variant more than older speakers, that age gradient is read as evidence of change unfolding across generations. The inference rests on the apparent-time hypothesis — that an individual's vernacular is largely fixed in adolescence and remains stable through adult life — so that the speech of today's seventy-year-olds reflects the community norms of roughly fifty years ago.
ScholarGateمجموعة البيانات
  1. v1
  2. 3 المصادر
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 3 المصادر
  3. PUBLISHED

انتقل إلى البحث تنزيل الشرائح

ScholarGateقارن الطرق: Sociophonetic Analysis · Apparent-Time Analysis. استُرجع بتاريخ 2026-06-24 من https://scholargate.app/ar/compare