Julien Meyer
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Julien Meyer.
Scientific American | 2017
Julien Meyer
The article offers information on whistling as a form of communication. Particular focus is given to how this whistling relates to later technology, including Morse code and smartphones. Additional topics discussed include linguistics and bioacoustics, the history of whistling in the village of Antia, Greece, and the physics of whistling.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2017
Julien Meyer; Laure Dentel; Fanny Meunier
Whistled speech in a non-tonal language consists of the natural emulation of vocalic and consonantal qualities in a simple modulated whistled signal. This special speech register represents a natural telecommunication system that enables high levels of sentence intelligibility by trained speakers and is not directly intelligible to naïve listeners. Yet, it is easily learned by speakers of the language that is being whistled, as attested by the current efforts of the revitalization of whistled Spanish in the Canary Islands. To better understand the relation between whistled and spoken speech perception, we look herein at how Spanish, French, and Standard Chinese native speakers, knowing nothing about whistled speech, categorized four Spanish whistled vowels. The results show that the listeners categorized differently depending on their native language. The Standard Chinese speakers demonstrated the worst performance on this task but were still able to associate a tonal whistle to vowel categories. Spanish speakers were the most accurate, and both Spanish and French participants were able to categorize the four vowels, although not as accurately as an expert whistler. These results attest that whistled speech can be used as a natural laboratory to test the perceptual processes of language.
conference of the international speech communication association | 2016
Julien Meyer; Laure Dentel; Fanny Meunier
Whistled speech in a non tonal language consists of the natural emulation of vocalic and consonantal qualities in a simple modulated whistled signal. This special speech register represents a natural telecommunication system that enables high levels of sentence intelligibility by trained speakers. It is not directly intelligible to naïve listeners. Yet, it is easily learned by speakers of the language that is being whistled, as attested by current efforts of revitalization of whistled Spanish in the Canary Islands. To understand better the relation between whistled and spoken speech perception, we looked here at how Spanish native speakers knowing nothing about whistled speech categorized four Spanish whistled vowels. The results show that naïve participants were able to categorize these vowels, although not as accurately as a native whistler.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Julien Meyer; Laure Dentel; Fanny Meunier
conference of the international speech communication association | 2012
Léo Varnet; Julien Meyer; Michel Hoen; Fanny Meunier
Scientific American | 2016
Julien Meyer
conference of the international speech communication association | 2013
Julien Meyer; Laure Dentel; Frank Seifart
conference of the international speech communication association | 2005
Julien Meyer
conference of the international speech communication association | 2018
Rachid Ridouane; Giuseppina Turco; Julien Meyer
conference of the international speech communication association | 2018
Julien Meyer; Fanny Meunier; Laure Dentel; Noelia Do Carmo Blanco; Frédéric Sèbe