Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
An Exploratory Study on Sociolinguistic Variation of Russian Everyday Speech. / Bogdanova-Beglarian, N.; Sherstinova, T.; Blinova, O.; Martynenko, G.
Speech and Computer: 18th International Conference, SPECOM 2016, Budapest, Hungary, August 23-27, 2016, Proceedings. Cham : Springer Nature, 2016. p. 100-107 (Lecture Notes in Computer Science; Vol. 9811).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
}
TY - GEN
T1 - An Exploratory Study on Sociolinguistic Variation of Russian Everyday Speech
AU - Bogdanova-Beglarian, N.
AU - Sherstinova, T.
AU - Blinova, O.
AU - Martynenko, G.
N1 - Conference code: 18
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - The research presented in this paper has been conducted in the framework of the large sociolinguistic project aimed at describing everyday spoken Russian and analyzing the special characteristics of its usage by different social groups of speakers. The research is based on the material of the ORD corpus containing long-term audio recordings of everyday communication. The aim of the given exploratory study is to reveal the linguistic parameters, in terms of which the difference in speech between different social groups is the most evident. An exploratory subcorpus, consisting of audio fragments of spoken communication of 12 respondents (6 men and 6 women, 4 representatives for each age group, and representatives of different professional and status groups) with the total duration of 106 min and of similar communication settings, was created and fully annotated. The quantitative description of a number of linguistic parameters on phonetic, lexical, morphological, and syntax levels in each social group was made. The biggest difference between social groups was observed in speech rate, phonetic reduction, lexical preferences, and syntactic irregularities. The study has shown that the differences between age groups are more significant than between gender groups, and the speech of young people differs most strongly from the others.
AB - The research presented in this paper has been conducted in the framework of the large sociolinguistic project aimed at describing everyday spoken Russian and analyzing the special characteristics of its usage by different social groups of speakers. The research is based on the material of the ORD corpus containing long-term audio recordings of everyday communication. The aim of the given exploratory study is to reveal the linguistic parameters, in terms of which the difference in speech between different social groups is the most evident. An exploratory subcorpus, consisting of audio fragments of spoken communication of 12 respondents (6 men and 6 women, 4 representatives for each age group, and representatives of different professional and status groups) with the total duration of 106 min and of similar communication settings, was created and fully annotated. The quantitative description of a number of linguistic parameters on phonetic, lexical, morphological, and syntax levels in each social group was made. The biggest difference between social groups was observed in speech rate, phonetic reduction, lexical preferences, and syntactic irregularities. The study has shown that the differences between age groups are more significant than between gender groups, and the speech of young people differs most strongly from the others.
KW - Russian everyday speech
KW - Sociolinguistics
KW - Phonetics
KW - Vocabulary
KW - Syntax
KW - Speech corpus
KW - speech corpus
KW - Russian language
KW - sociolinguistics
KW - Russian everyday speech
KW - Multilevel linguistic analysis
KW - Phonetics
KW - Vocabulary
KW - Syntax
KW - Social groups
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-43958-7_11
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-43958-7_11
M3 - Conference contribution
SN - 978-3-319-43957-0
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science
SP - 100
EP - 107
BT - Speech and Computer
PB - Springer Nature
CY - Cham
T2 - 18 International Conference on Speech and Computer
Y2 - 23 August 2016 through 27 August 2016
ER -
ID: 71300840