विधियों की तुलना करें
चुनी हुई विधियों की आमने-सामने समीक्षा करें; भिन्नता वाली पंक्तियाँ रेखांकित हैं।
| Perceptual Dialectology× | Sociophonetic Analysis× | |
|---|---|---|
| क्षेत्र | भाषाविज्ञान | भाषाविज्ञान |
| परिवार | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| उद्भव वर्ष≠ | 1989 | 2006 |
| प्रवर्तक≠ | Dennis R. Preston (building on Dutch and Japanese folk-dialectology traditions) | Sociophoneticians (William Labov; Paul Foulkes; Erik R. Thomas) |
| प्रकार≠ | Folk-linguistic method for studying non-linguists' perceptions of dialects | Workflow correlating acoustic phonetic measurement with social factors |
| मौलिक स्रोत≠ | Preston, D. R. (1989). Perceptual Dialectology: Nonlinguists' Views of Areal Linguistics. Foris. ISBN: 9789067654487 | Foulkes, 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: 9781405145909 |
| उपनाम | Folk Dialectology, Perceptual Dialect Mapping, Draw-a-Map Dialectology | Sociophonetics, Sociophonetic Variation Analysis, Phonetic Variation Analysis |
| संबंधित | 4 | 4 |
| सारांश≠ | Perceptual dialectology studies what ordinary, non-linguist speakers believe about language variation: where they think different dialects are spoken, what those dialects sound like, and how correct, pleasant, or different they judge them to be. Developed in its modern form by Dennis R. Preston in the 1980s, it is a branch of folk linguistics that treats lay perceptions as data in their own right rather than as errors to be corrected. Through draw-a-map tasks, dialect ranking, and identification exercises, it reveals the mental maps and social evaluations that shape how people experience the linguistic landscape around them. | Sociophonetic 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. |
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