Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2010 16:51:26 -0400<br>From: Claire Bowern <<a href="mailto:clairebowern@GMAIL.COM">clairebowern@GMAIL.COM</a>><br>Subject: survey<br><br>Hi everyone,<br>Some colleagues at the University of Auckland and I are conducting a survey on North American English and trialling the use of flash web recording for phonetic analysis. We are doing a short survey collecting examples of as many different types of American English as possible. We are aiming for a few thousand responses from all over the US. We're also aiming to be as representative as possible for age, gender, geography, ethnicity and class (as representative as we can be given we're using an internet-based survey system). If you would like to participate by recording a short wordlist, please visit <a href="http://pantheon.yale.edu/%7Eclb3/NorthAmericanDialects/">NorthAmericanDialects</a> for further information and instructions. The survey is open to anyone who grew up speaking English and will take approximately five minutes to complete. If you could help us spread the word by forwarding this to friends, family, networks, students, etc, that would be great!<br>
<br>While this is an English survey, I hope our survey will be representative of US English in all its varieties, and that includes English as spoken by Native American, First Nations, Alaska Native and other Indigenous groups. The second (and perhaps more important) is that this survey will be a large-scale trial of a flash-based web recording program for phonetic and linguistic research, and that is potentially of relevance to the work we do here with distance-based language work. I hope to be able to share some of the results from that side of the project too. Our trials over the last few months showed that the mp3 format that we're using it good enough for fairly reliable format tracking, perhaps formant bandwidth measurement, and duration measurements. In terms of clarity, it depended heavily of course on microphone placement and computer volume but on the whole was pretty good - certainly better than I was expecting.<br>
<br>For any questions regarding this project, please contact Dr. Claire Bowern, <br>Department of Linguistics, <br>Yale University. <br>Phone: - 203.432.2045, <br>E-mail: <a href="mailto:claire.bowern@yale.edu">claire.bowern@yale.edu</a>.<br>
<br>Have a good weekend!<br>Claire<br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Margaret Florey<br>Consultant linguist<br>Director, Resource Network for Linguistic Diversity <<a href="http://www.rnld.org">www.rnld.org</a>><br><br>
Email: <a href="mailto:Margaret.Florey@gmail.com">Margaret.Florey@gmail.com</a><br>Ph: +61 (0)4 3186-3727 (mob.)<br>skype: margaret_florey<br>