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Dive into the research topics where Mark A. Sicoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark A. Sicoli.


Language in Society | 2010

Shifting voices with participant roles: Voice qualities and speech registers in Mesoamerica

Mark A. Sicoli

Although an increasing number of sociolinguistic researchers consider functions of voice qualities as stylistic features, few studies consider cases where voice qualities serve as the primary signs of speech registers. This article addresses this gap through the presentation of a case study of Lachixio Zapotec speech registers indexed though falsetto, breathy, creaky, modal, and whispered voice qualities. I describe the system of contrastive speech registers in Lachixio Zapotec and then track a speaker on a single evening where she switches between three of these registers. Analyzing line-by-line conversational structure I show both obligatory and creative shifts between registers that co-occur with shifts in the participant structures of the situated social interactions. I then examine similar uses of voice qualities in other Zapotec languages and in the two unrelated language families Nahuatl and Mayan to suggest the possibility that such voice registers are a feature of the Mesoamerican culture area. (Voice quality, register, performance, metapragmatics, Mesoamerica, Zapotecan, Mayan, Nahuatl)*


PLOS ONE | 2014

Linguistic Phylogenies Support Back-Migration from Beringia to Asia

Mark A. Sicoli; Gary Holton

Recent arguments connecting Na-Dene languages of North America with Yeniseian languages of Siberia have been used to assert proof for the origin of Native Americans in central or western Asia. We apply phylogenetic methods to test support for this hypothesis against an alternative hypothesis that Yeniseian represents a back-migration to Asia from a Beringian ancestral population. We coded a linguistic dataset of typological features and used neighbor-joining network algorithms and Bayesian model comparison based on Bayes factors to test the fit between the data and the linguistic phylogenies modeling two dispersal hypotheses. Our results support that a Dene-Yeniseian connection more likely represents radiation out of Beringia with back-migration into central Asia than a migration from central or western Asia to North America.


Language and Speech | 2015

Marked Initial Pitch in Questions Signals Marked Communicative Function

Mark A. Sicoli; Tanya Stivers; N. J. Enfield; Stephen C. Levinson

In conversation, the initial pitch of an utterance can provide an early phonetic cue of the communicative function, the speech act, or the social action being implemented. We conducted quantitative acoustic measurements and statistical analyses of pitch in over 10,000 utterances, including 2512 questions, their responses, and about 5000 other utterances by 180 total speakers from a corpus of 70 natural conversations in 10 languages. We measured pitch at first prominence in a speaker’s utterance and discriminated utterances by language, speaker, gender, question form, and what social action is achieved by the speaker’s turn. Through applying multivariate logistic regression we found that initial pitch that significantly deviated from the speaker’s median pitch level was predictive of the social action of the question. In questions designed to solicit agreement with an evaluation rather than information, pitch was divergent from a speaker’s median predictably in the top 10% of a speakers range. This latter finding reveals a kind of iconicity in the relationship between prosody and social action in which a marked pitch correlates with a marked social action. Thus, we argue that speakers rely on pitch to provide an early signal for recipients that the question is not to be interpreted through its literal semantics but rather through an inference.


Archive | 2011

Agency and ideology in language shift and language maintenance

Mark A. Sicoli


Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society | 1999

Loanwords and Contact-Induced Phonological Change in Lachixío Zapotec

Mark A. Sicoli


Pragmatics and Society | 2014

Ideophones, rhemes, interpretants

Mark A. Sicoli


Journal of Linguistic Anthropology | 2012

Language, Culture, and Mind: Natural Constructions and Social Kinds by Paul Kockelman. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. ix + 246pp.

Mark A. Sicoli


SSILA Summer Meeting 2009 (Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas) | 2009

Dialogic repetition in Tzeltal, Yucatec, and Zapotec conversation

Penelope Brown; Olivier Le Guen; Mark A. Sicoli


Archive | 2009

The language of sound: II

Mark A. Sicoli; Asifa Majid; Stephen C. Levinson


Open Linguistics | 2016

Formulating Place, Common Ground, and a Moral Order in Lachixío Zapotec

Mark A. Sicoli

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Gary Holton

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Tanya Stivers

University of California

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