La compréhension de l’ironie et des requêtes indirectes non conventionnelles chez des individus cérébrolésés droits et traumatisés crâniens : profils pathologiques, développement d’un outil d’évaluation et prise en charge (in French)
Under the supervision of Maud Champagne-Lavau (LPL) and Marion Fossard (University of Neuchâtel)
Jury:
M. Philippe Allain – University of Angers
M. Jean-Marie Annoni – University of Fribourg
Mme Laura Monetta – University Laval, Québec
Mme Maud Champagne-Lavau – LPL (CNRS/AMU)
Mme Marion Fossard – University of Neuchâtel
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Due to the sanitary situation, the thesis defense will be held by video conference.
Those interested in participating in the defense can log in from 2:30 p.m. on the following link: https://unine.webex.com/meet/elena.smirnova.
We thank you for muting the sound.
A study of the intonation system in Dublin English: focus on stylistic rises
Jury:
Sophie Herment (AMU), Director
Daniel Hirst (AMU), Jury president
Anne Przewozny (Toulouse Jean Jaurès)
Sylvie Hanote (Poitiers)
Cristel Portes (AMU)
Stephan Wilhelm (Université de Bourgogne)
This dissertation is a multidimensional analysis of Dublin English in its sociolinguistic, phonetic and phonological aspects and has two major objectives: the detailed description of the intonational system of Dublin English (and the evaluation of the influence of some sociological criteria) and the in-depth study of the stylistic rises that can be found at the end of declarative sentences. These so-called HRTs (High Rising Terminals) or uptalk contours are used for various pragmatic purposes (such as seeking validation or ensuring that the speaker is following the conversation) and are present in many varieties of English. They have the particularity of carrying different functions and forms depending on the variety in which they are found. With an authentic corpus of 31 speakers recorded in the framework of the PAC programme (Phonology of Contemporary English, Durand & Przewozny-Desriaux, 2011) and the PAC Prosody protocol developed for this work, we demonstrate that Dublin has its own intonational system which is more static than that of Standard British English. We then show how several criteria such as gender and the proficiency in Irish can sometimes explain the variation encountered in Dublin. We then proceed to an in-depth study of HRTs in the city, showing that women make more of them and that these HRTs are distinguished from interrogative and continuative rises mainly by the increase in the fundamental frequency curve and by pragmatic features. Finally, we discuss how these rises and the speakers who produce them are perceived in Ireland.
Variables socio-commutatives, attitudes psycho-émotionnelles et détails acoustique-articulatoires du parlé : une étude sur une communauté de locuteurs de français L2 originaires du sud de l'Italie
Under the direction of Mariapaola d'Imperio (AMU) and Silvia Calamai (Univ. di Siena)
Jury: Mme CHIARA CELATA - Univ. Urbino Carlo Bo Mme ELISABETTA CARPITELLI - Univ. Grenoble M. ORESTE FLOQUET - Univ. di Romà la Sapienza Mme BARBARA GILIFIVELA - Univ. di Salento Mme GIOVANNA MAROTTA - Univ. di Pisa M. ALESSANDRO VIETTI - Univ. libre de Bolzano Mme SILVIA CALAMAI - Univ. di Siena Mme MARIAPAOLA D'IMPERIO - AMU
International adoption of children: sociolinguistic perspectives
Under the direction of Sylvie Wharton
Jury: M. CHRISTIAN OLLIVIER – Univ. La Réunion M. FRÉDÉRIC TUPIN – Univ. La Réunion M. MÉDÉRIC GASQUET-CYRUS – AMU Mme SOFIA STRATILAKI – Univ. du Luxembourg Mme SYLVIE WHARTON – AMU
Abstract:
The international adoption often puts adopted children in a new linguistic situation. However, although sociolinguistic studies confirm that the role of the language of first socialization is essential in the social and educational integration of children in the context of migration, they have not yet examined the case of adopted children. This study is therefore the first sociolinguistic analysis of adoptions. The research proposed here was carried out in collaboration with the Marseille comitee of the French Confederation for Adoption (COFA). Using a qualitative and ethnographic approach, I conducted a field study on international adoption by focusing on adoptive families, adoption intermediaries and health and education professionals involved in the care of children. This work identifies the sociolinguistic issues inherent to international adoption. This work also characterizes the role of different agents in the language development of adopted children.
Abstract:
In morphology, the type frequencies of the different patterns in existing forms have a considerable influence in the way speakers create new forms, i.e., on the productivity of those patterns. However, type frequencies are sometimes insufficient to fully account for the productivity, or lack thereof, of some morphological patterns. This raises the question of which other factors may play a role in the abstraction and updating of the representations that guide morphological productivity. This thesis addresses this question by exploring linguistic situations in which the influence of the type frequencies is limited by a low number of existing forms and/or may conflict with the new input speakers encounter in an interaction.
Our results show that the type frequencies indeed play a major role in the way speakers create novel forms. However, speakers sometimes fail to abstract a pattern when the number of existing forms is too low. In this situation, certain patterns are over- or under-represented in novel forms as compared to their type frequencies among existing forms. The presence of preferences which are unmotivated by type frequencies suggests that speakers have inherent biases towards certain patterns.
Besides, speakers are able to quickly converge with an interaction partner, even when this goes against the tendencies observed in existing forms. Thus, it follows that speakers can gradually modify their preferences through the accumulated effect of morphological convergence in multiple interactions. Consequently, these findings suggest an important role for convergence in the emergence and evolution of morphological patterns.
Rethinking methods of FLE in the Libyan context, theoretical and practical aspects [Presentation in French]
Under the direction of Cyril Aslanov
Jury: Mr. JAN GOES – Univ. Artois Mr. FOUED LAROUSSI – Univ. Rouen Mrs VALERIE SPAETH – Univ. Paris 3 Mr. GEORGES-DANIEL VERONIQUE – AMU Mr. CYRIL ASLANOV – Director – AMU
A data intensive approach for characterizing speech interpersonal dynamics in natural conversations
Under the direction of Laurent Prévot (LPL) and Benoit Favre (LIS)
Jury members:
Prof. Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University
Prof. Giuseppe Riccardi, Università degli Studi di Trento
Prof. Stefan Benus, Constantine the Philosopher University
Cr. Roxane Bertrand, LPL
Director: Prof. Laurent Prevot, LPL
Co-Director: Prof. Benoit Favre, LIS
Abstract:
During a conversation, participants tend to tune, consciously or not, their communicative production in regards to their interlocutor. It is generally admitted, that under standard circumstances, these phenomena result in convergence of the two participants’ speech parameters.
Past literature offers a large part of studies describing the effects of convergence in interpersonal dynamics but there are still some unclear aspects.
These concerns firstly the mechanisms that rule the phenomenon in natural conversations. These are hard to be studied due to the spontaneous flow of the conversants that results to be noisy and variable. In second place in this kind of conversation is still not well known how participants modify their speech style (the dynamics i.e.) in the course of the conversation.
In this thesis, we aim to validate previous results in acoustic-prosodic convergence and provide novel approaches to have a partial a posteriori filter on natural conversations and to track the interpersonal dynamics.
We firstly perform a replication study on the speech rate, confirming that speaker speech rate in the entire conversation converge to their interlocutor speech rate baseline (average speech rate they have in other conversations) even if we perform the analysis on smaller subsets of the original dataset. On the other side, we raised that convergence effects are less reliable in magnitude and significance when reducing the size of the dataset.
In the second part, we explore the dynamics of convergence effects by comparing the distances of average acoustic-prosodic features in the two halves of each conversation (interval of the same temporal length) between the speaker and interlocutor. Results exhibit that both energy and speech rate show convergence in the second half of the conversations of the corpus. In addition, we extend this approach by proposing to study natural conversations comparing similar speech activities. This approach has the advantage to have a posteriori control of the natural flow of the speaker and interlocutor in spontaneous conversation. We observed that the comparison of speaker and interlocutor in more homogeneous speech activities leads to having convergent effects even if the size of the sample is much smaller than the uncontrolled dataset. Based on this idea the thesis proposes a way to automatically tag speech activities for unlabelled data of this kind with the use of a recent LSTM net for classification.
Besides measuring distances between speaker and interlocutor we propose a prediction classifier paradigm to explore the speaker and interlocutor position in the second half of the conversation.
By the use of a Random Classifier, we correlate the use of linguistics variables that describes the trend of speech style of speaker and interlocutor with profile information with the increase of accuracy score in predicting the speech rate variation in the second half of the conversation.
In the last part, we deepen the study of the dynamics in a more fine grain segments of the conversations. The goal is the prediction of mean variables (energy, range F0 and speech rate) in the upcoming turn by the use of previous turns history information that include speech style and lexical information; results, achieved by the use of separately LSTM and LSTM with word embeddings layer, exhibit that the use
of interlocutor and speaker speech style in the previous turns reduce the prediction error of the upcoming turn compared to the case of using just past turns of the speaker.
These results extend the landscape of convergence effects in the not controlled dataset and offer novel approaches, concerning the method to control the variability of natural conversations and the prediction task paradigm to evaluate the interpersonal dynamics, consisting in evaluating the influence of the speaker and interlocutor on each other speech style.
Abstract:
While neuroimaging and behavioral studies have shown that sensory-motor systems are recruited during semantic processing, how and when this occurs has not yet been clearly established. Our purpose was to observe the different contexts in which motor activation can contribute to language comprehension and learning, using interactive and ecologically valid environments. In our first study, novice learners acquired a reduced second language (L2) lexicon through interactive computer games. Behavioral and electroencephalography (EEG) results indexed rapid L2 word learning. Interestingly, even-related potential (ERP) results revealed a gender congruency effect such that only words that had the same grammatical gender across participants’ L1 and L2 gave rise to an N400 effect for match vs mismatch auditory word and image pairs, indicating that these words were better encoded. In a second study, we used an action-sentence compatibility effect (ACE) paradigm to evaluate how motor preparation affects language processing. ERP results showed greater N400 amplitude for congruent compared to incongruent action-sentence trials, suggesting that compatibility between motor and language processes produced interference. In studies 3 and 4, we combined virtual reality (VR) and EEG to investigate interactions between language processing and motor activation. In the first of these studies, participants heard action verbs in their native language and performed varied actions on a virtual object in a Cave automatic virtual environment (CAVE) during a Go-Nogo task. Time frequency analysis showed motor activation for both Go and Nogo conditions during action verb processing and prior to movement proper. In addition, greater motor activation for Go versus Nogo trials. Our final (projected) study is a registered report that aims to determine the neural correlates of embodied L2 learning by having participants encode auditory action verbs using an interactive virtual reality head-mounted display system and specific real-life actions on a virtual object. Using behavioral and EEG measures in a pre-post training design, this condition will be compared to a control condition in which participants will simply point to the virtual object.
The body of the work reported in this dissertation represents a significant step towards better understanding the subtle relationship between motor and semantic processes. By making use of new technologies that allow for manipulating and controlling the environment, our work opens up fresh perspectives for taking into account the contextual nature of how we learn and understand language.